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House damaged in blaze; six KU students displaced
By Ronnie Wachter Kansan staff writer
Several KU students awoke yesterday morning to flames and smoke in their house at 839 Mississippi St. The fire caused $40,000 in damage, said Jerry Karr, Lawrence Douglas County Fire and Medical Department battalion chief.
Karr said the house had eight occupants, six of whom were University of Kansas students.
The fire was reported at 7:58 a.m., and firefighters arrived at 8:02. Karr said.
"We had heavy fire and smoke coming through the roof and out of the windows of the third floor." he said.
None of the occupants were injured during the blaze, but one firefighter suffered minor injuries in a fall inside the house, Karr said.
The cause of the fire was determined to be an overheated electric motor in an attic fan, he said.
"The third floor is basically obliterated." said Brian Jones, Apple Valley, Minn., junior. "The people in the floor that burned weren't there. They were really lucky."
The six KU students living in the house were Wade Kelly, Atwood freshman; Christopher Stoddard, Lawrence junior; Michael Brenner, Iowa City, Iowa, sophomore; Amy Rose, Erie sophomore; Katie Rcvhel, Tulsa, Okla., freshman and Jones.
Karr said firefighters had the fire under control within 22 minutes, and firefighters had put it out before 9:15 a.m.
"It's really unexpected," Jones said. "I was at work, and my roommates were asleep. The people from the Kwik Shop saw the fire and woke them up."
The residents of the house said that they were moving out.
He said that the residents of the basement, first and second floors were able to safely return to the home last night. The third floor, which housed only one occupant, was too damaged to be immediately inhabitable, he said.
"An inspector came by and checked the wiring, and told us we needed to get out." Jones said. "There's water all over everything."
Karr said that cleaning the water out of the building's basement would be the first priority.
the intersection of Ninth and Mississippi streets was blocked off by Lawrence police officers until about 10 a.m. yesterday to keep traffic away from the scene, said Dave Davis of Lawrence Fire Department's occupational services.
Wreckage sits outside 839 Mississippi St., following a fire that caused $40,000 dollars worth of damage and injured one firefighter. The fire was reported at 7:58 a.m. yesterday. Photo by Lizz Weber / KANSAN
Thunderstorms follow scorching heat wave
By Graham K. Johnson and Michael Martin
Kansas staff writers
If variety is the spice of life, then the weather sure has spiced up life in Lawrence.
Residents have experienced extremes in weather from thunderstorms to heat waves this past week. A week of searing heat and humidity culminated in a severe thunderstorm Monday night that had 70-80 mph winds.
At 7:25 p.m., the National Weather Service issued a tornado warning for northern Douglas County and southern Jefferson County, said Mike Akulow, meteorologist at the NWS's Topeka office.
The tornado warning quickly brought home the severity of the storms to students such as Paula Hetherington, Lenexa senior.
"It was exciting, but I get paranoid," Hetherington said. "Natural disasters scare me."
The tornado never materialized, but a strong thunderstorm arrived shortly afterward.
Hetherington is a conference assistant for a cheerleading camp staying in Oliver Hall. She said that they had to shepherd 50 to 60 teen-age girls to the basement when the warning came.
"There were actually a series of them; a line of them went through, but the strongest one was at 8 p.m.," Akulow said.
Akulow said that the storms were part of a large front that also covered Iowa and Missouri. He said it was a typical Kansas June storm, although the winds were rather strong.
The storm was reported to have winds as strong as 85 mph. Akulow said.
The winds managed to down tree limbs and power lines, but were not reported to have caused any injuries or major property damage, said Ron Wilson, deputy sheriff with the Douglas County Emergency Management Association.
"It really wasn't a major deal." Wilson said. "It appeared a lot worse than it was."
About 12,000 to 13,000 people were without power for much of the night, a Western Resources spokesman said.
Students and residents also have had to deal with sweltering temperatures more than 90 degrees which are worse with added high humidity. The heat index has reached the 100 degree mark several times this week.
The heat index is a number calculated using the actual temperature plus the amount of moisture in the air to determine what the temperature feels like on the skin. Akulow said. He said that humidity makes it feel hotter because it does not allow sweat to evaporate and help people cool down.
Akulow said that the heat may subside for the next few days because of a wave of cool air, but that residents should expect continued chances for thunderstorms throughout the week.
The humidity and the storms are linked together. Akulow said. Humidity is a main ingredient in any thunderstorm.
"If you have a lot of humidity it sort of goes like a firecracker," Akulow said. "If you have a lot of black powder, the bigger the bang it makes."
Storm knocks out residents' power
By Michael Martin Kanson staff writer
Monday night's storms cut off the power supply to approximately 12,000 to 13,000 Lawrence residences, a representative for Kansas Power & Light said yesterday.
Power had been restored to all but 1,400 residences by yesterday afternoon, said Mark Schneider, manager of community relations for KPL.
Schneider said that KPL planned to restore power to those residences by 9 p.m. last night.
Gina Brown, Overland Park senior,
spent an uncomfortable night without
electricity or air conditioning.
Brown said that her house at 1028 Tennessee St. went dark when the storm hit at 8 p.m. Monday, and that power was not restored until 8:30 a.m. yesterday.
"We had no electricity, so we had no fans. It was pitch black. Everything was knocked out except the phones," she said.
The storm also affected stoplights and street lamps.
At 9:30 p.m. Monday, several stoplights and street lamps along Tennessee and Iowa streets were not functioning. Most had been repaired by yesterday morning.
Tennessee Street plagued by high speeds, accidents
THE LOVE OF A DRIVER
Residents complain city stays indifferent as accidents pile up
By Michael Martin
Kansan staff writer
Travis Alderson came home to find his car parked exactly where he left it, in the street outside his house at 10th and Tennessee streets, but with a few modifications.
The back windshield was shattered. The back of the car was crumpled. The car, a 1989 Honda Civic, had been totaled without leaving the side of the curb.
It had been hit by a car traveling at high speed along Tennessee, a two-lane, one-way street with a 30 mile per hour speed limit.
Lawrence resident Travis Alderson stands by the wreckage of his car on the side of Tennessee Street Alderson's car, a 1989 Honda Civic, was hit by a car traveling south in the 1000 block of Tennesse. Photo by Michael Martin/KANSAN
The incident was not entirely unexpected by Alderson, who had observed cars speeding by his house before.
"You have to wait five minutes on the curb before you can even cross the street," said Alderson, a 26-year-old Lawrence resident.
Rosel was struck by a car and killed while crossing the street in front of Bull Winkle's Bar, 1344 Tennessee St.
In the past three months, several accidents have occurred within the 900 and 1400 blocks of Tennessee, an area heavily populated and trafficked by KU students.
On June 6, a car carrying four persons traveling 70 mph swerved off the road and wrapped around a tree at Ninth and Tennessee streets.
Alderson's friend Alley McDermott, a 26-year-old Lawrence resident, heard that accident happen and was on the scene before police, she said. It was the third accident on Tennessee Street that she and Alderson had experienced firsthand in the last six months.
McDermott said that city officials were indifferent to their part of town.
Sgt. George Wheeler of the Lawrence police department said Tennessee Street was a major thoroughfare which always has had a high accident rate.
In April, Overland Park freshman Lisa
"I don't think the city is doing anything in the student ghetto." McDermott said.
Police officers run radar checks only when not responding to emergency or service calls, which allows an overextended staff little time to enforce speed limits. Wheeler said.
"Tennessee Street is a high-volume street, and we're there," he said.
Wheeler said he didn't know if Lawrence police had increased patrolling Tennessee Street in the past few months and that adding stop signs or traffic lights would be infeasible.
"We don't have the staff to back it up," he said.
Mike Wildgen City Manager
"Some of those accidents have been related to drinking,and that's something a stoplight isn't going to change."
"If you're just doing it to slow traffic down, you could put a stoplight at every corner. I don't think that's a viable option." he said.
Tennessee street has fewer stop signs and traffic signals than surrounding streets.
From Sixth to 23rd streets, Tennessee Street has one stop sign and four traffic lights. Kentucky Street, an adjacent street that runs one-way in the opposite direction, has two stop signs and six traffic lights. Vermont Street, a less-trafficked residential area east of Kentucky and Tennessee streets, has three traffic lights and six stop signs.
City Manager Mike Wilden said that the city had no plans to add additional stop signs or traffic signals to Tennessee Street.
Wildgen said the city had acquired a
Smart Trailer, a mobile unit that informs drivers of their speed, and would begin using it on city streets in combination with increased speed-limit enforcement.
The Kansas Department of Transportation reported 83 accidents in 1995 on Tennessee Street and 113 in 1996, the last year for which figures were available.
For Travis Alderson, anti-speeding
campaigns won't help get his car back. Because he has no collision insurance, it will not be replaced, he said.
Alley McDermott said Tennessee Street's high accident rate has made her yearn for New York City, where she lived for years—without a car.
"This has reminded me why I had stopped driving," she said.
.
5.
X
2A
The Inside Front
Wednesday July 1, 1998
News
from campus and the city
LAWRENCE
CAMPUS
Board of Regents picks chairman, vice chairman
The Board of Regents elected Bill Docking, Arkansas City resident, to serve as Regents chairman, according to a Regents press release. The Regents also selected Ken Hawner, Hays resident, to be vice chairman. Both begin their one-year terms today.
A Regents member since 1995, Docking is president, director and CEO of the Union State Bank in Arkansas City. He also serves as a managing member of Docking Development, LLC, an oil production company in Oxford.
Docking earned a bachelor's degree in political science, a master's degree in business administration and a law degree from the University of Kansas.
Havner also was appointed as a Regents member in 1995. He is a member of the Kansas Bar Association and the Kansas Association of Defense Counsel.
Havner earned a bachelor of arts degree at Fort Hays State University and a law degree from Washburn University.
—Duane Wagler
One strike, and air's out in Murphy, Summerfield
Lightning from Monday night's storms caused Murphy Hall and a wing of Summerfield Hall to be without air conditioning yesterday.
Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said that lightning destroyed the power supply to the buildings' air conditioning systems.
Electrical equipment was being inspected yesterday to determine if it needed to be replaced. Air conditioning would not be restored to the buildings before today, Porter said.
High school music students participating
in the Midwestern Music Camp sweated in the stifling practice areas and choral room of Murphy Hall yesterday afternoon as temperatures rose,
Staff members of the department of music and dance expressed concern about the heat's effect on Murphy Hall's equipment and instruments, including the harpsichord and pipe organ in Bales Recital Hall.
"The organ has to remain at 72 degrees with 50 percent humidity," said Rita Van de Lune, office supervisor for the department of music and dance. "The humidifier is getting watered down, but with temperatures getting higher than 72 degrees, there's not much that can be done."
Sandi Williams, assistant dean of the School of Business, said that the north wing of Summerfield Hall was without air conditioning. Classes continued to meet as faculty members attempted to move classes to air-conditioned rooms in the building's other wing, she said.
Michael Martin
Deja vu for 'new' acting human resources director
Ola Faucher has been named acting director of the human resources department. The appointment Thursday marks the second time Faucher has been named to the post in her 26-year career at the University of Kansas.
was acting director for nine months in 1993. Faucher replaces Marc Adin, who left June 7. Associate Provost Lindy Eakin said in a press release that a search for a permanent director had not begun.
As acting director, Faucher will oversee the beginning of a health insurance program for the University's 1,500 graduate teaching assistants and resident assistants. Her other responsibilities will include upgrading computer software for human resources and payroll, revisiting staff orientation programs and expanding professional development services.
Faucher began her career in 1972 as a clerk for the KU libraries. She then moved to human resources in 1976 as its first staff development manager.
A University of Kansas graduate, Faucher earned bachelor's degrees in English and French in 1971 and a master's degree in public administration with an emphasis on human resources in 1987.
New associate comptroller moves into position today
Dana Goble, a 17-year University of Kansas employee, has been named associate comptroller, according to a University Relations press release. She will begin her new position today, moving from her previous job as associate director of purchasing.
Goble began working in the comptroller's office while she was earning a bachelor's degree in business administration at the University. She was hired as a full-time clerk after graduating in 1981. She then worked in sponsored-program accounting and accounts payable before moving to the purchasing department in 1997.
As associate comptroller, Goble will be responsible for accounts payable, general accounting and payroll units.
"Being in that position gives me a broader view of the financial activities at the University," she said.
The estate of a University of Kansas alumnus has donated $50,000 for unrestricted scholarships and $20,000 for student loans.
University alumnus wills final gift of scholarships
The gift came from the estate of the late William Holford of Kansas City. Mo.
Holford was born in 1924 in Topeka. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Navy and attended several colleges including William Jewell College and Tulane University. He completed his education at the University of Kansas after the war, graduating from the School of Business in 1948.
After college, Holford moved to New York City and began his career as an accountant for Price Waterhouse. He later had positions with Standard Oil, the New York Metropolitan Transit Authority and the United Nations.
After a prolonged battle with cancer, Holford died in 1996.
The gift will be administered by the KU Endowment Association,KU Endowment Association President Jim Martin said Thursday in a press release.
—Duane Waaler
A fistfight Monday afternoon led to a Lawrence man being shot later that evening at 1.5th and Harper streets, Lawrence police said.
Fistfight leads to shooting; jealousy possible motive
Sgt. George Wheeler of the Lawrence police department said the fight between two Lawrence men began at 1 p.m. in the 1600 block of Harper Street. The men may have been fighting about a woman. Wheeler said.
p. m. while they were driving through the intersection of 15th and Harper streets. The injured man's friend then opened fire with a handgun, taking a series of shots at the man, Wheeler said.
After the fight, one of the men took himself to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 425 Maine St., where he was treated and released, Wheeler said.
CITY
He said that the man who went to the hospital then picked up a friend, and the two went out to look for the other man who had been in the fight
the men found the third man at 3:20
The man who was fired upon was struck once in the arm, and another shot struck a nearby house. One witness said he heard a total of eight shots fired.
The man who was shot drove himself to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was found by police and arrested for aggravated battery in the fistfight.
"We have recovered some evidence, including a slug and a handgun," Wheeler said. He said he did not know where the handgun was found.
The gunman, identified and contacted by police, was arrested and charged with one count of attempted first-degree murder.
Wheeler said that the case was still under investigation, and asked that anyone with information regarding the case call Lawrence police or Crimestoppers at 841-TIPS.
Dog bites the hand that intended to feed him
A Lawrence man was attacked Monday night by a dog whose owner died last week, Lawrence police said.
Sgt. George Wheeler said that Jane A. Mibek, 65, died in her home in the 800 block of 12th Street. Her body was discovered at 12:28 p.m. Monday.
That evening, a neighbor noticed that Mibeck's white German shepherd, Vitor, was outside the house, and had not been given food or water since Mibeck's death. Wheeler said. The neighbor, a 47 year-old man, went to Mibeck's house and let Vitor in.
"The victim was trying to feed the dog when Vitor bit him." Wheeler said.
The man received a puncture wound on his left hand, Wheeler said. Lawrence Animal Control put the dog in quarantine to check him for rabies.
Man learns kissing to be clever was not too smart
An employee of Taco Bell, 1428 West 23rd St, offended a customer at 8 p.m. Sunday, causing her to leave and himself to be arrested, Lawrence police said.
The employee kissed the hand of a 17-year-old Eudora female while she was ordering, said Sgt. George Wheeler. The female was offended and left the establishment, he said.
The female returned at 8:10 p.m. with several males, who got into an altercation with the employee, Wheeler said.
The employee was arrested on a charge of sexual battery, and one other male, a 16-year-old Eudora resident, was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct.
Ronnie Wachter
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A KU student's portable CD player and 12 CDs were stolen between June 20 and June 21 from Malalt Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $290.
A KU student's wallet was either lost or stolen at 12:45 p.m. June 22 near Daisy Hill, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $95.
- A KU student's wallet was stolen at 1:35 p.m. June 19 from Robinson Center, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $5.5.
A KU student was arrested for possession of marijuana at 8:35 a.m. Thursday at the men's locker room in Safety Center, the KU Office of Public Safety said.
A staff member's digital cordless phone was stolen between June 19 and June 22 from Wesco Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $1.60.
A student's money was stolen at 8:45 a.m. June 24 from Haworth Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $18
A student's gym bag was stolen at 3:10 p.m.
Thursday from Robinson Center, the KU Office of
Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $67.
A staff member's blue parking permit was stolen between 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Thursday from Fram Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $120.
A Lawrence resident was arrested for transporting an open container at 1:30 a.m. m. Saturday at 19th Street and Naismith Drive, the KU Office of Public Safety said.
A staff member's blue parking permit was either lost or stolen between June 24 and June 25 from Haworth Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety. The loss was valued at $110.
A computer was stolen between June 5 and June 26 from Twente Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $1,300.
- Cash was stolen from University Theatre between June 19 and June 23 in Murphy Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $288.
A computer was stolen between Friday and Monday from Snow Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $1,900.
The right front window of a KU student's car was smashed, and a 400 amp amplifier and five other items were stolen between June 2' and June 22 in the 700 block of East 22nd Street, Lawrence police said. The loss was valued at $1,465.
A KU student's two digital cellular phones were stolen between June 19 and June 20 in the 2600 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police said. The phones were valued at $500
A KU employee's gold wedding ring and gold chain necklace were stolen between June 18 and June 19 in the 3600 block of Parkview Court, Lawrence police said. The loss was valued at $410.
A KU student was the victim of disorderly conduct between 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. June 19 in the 1800 block of Massachusetts Street. Lawrence police said.
A KU employee's leather checkbook,
the driver's license and other items were stolen
at 2 p.m. June 22 in the 1000 block of West
Sixth Street, Lawrence police said. The loss
was valued at $332.
A KU student's check was forged between 11:34 and 13:16 p.m. June 5 in the 3500 block of Clinton Parkway, Lawrence police said. The forged check was for $21,06.
A windshield wiper and a tire of a KU student's car were damaged between midnight and noon thursday in the 600 block of Gateway Drive, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $100.
A wheel and fire of a KU student's car were stolen between 1 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Saturday in the 2100 block of Kasold Drive, Lawrence police said. The loss was valued at $150.
A KU employee's car stereo, day planner and makeup bag were stolen between June 21 and June 22 in the 600 block of North Second Street, Lawrence police said. The loss was valued at $135.
One hundred CDs and a CD case were stolen from a KU student between 1:30 and 4:10 a.m. Sunday in the 800 block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police said. The loss was valued at $1,520.
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Wednesday, July 1, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 3
Changes to work regulations to help some Asian students
By Beth Janes Kansan staff writer
When Erlinda Tjhai goes grocery shopping she compares prices carefully. She buys only essential items, but it was not always this way.
Tjhal, a senior from Indonesia, is one of many students at the University of Kansas affected by the Asian economic crisis. On June 10, the Immigration and Naturalization Service announced that it was relaxing employment regulations for eligible students from five countries hit hardest by the crisis: Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines.
"This is a huge step," said Daphne Johnston, associate director of International Student Services. "I'm somewhat surprised that the Immigration Service even went this far, because they have opened the door to accommodate other groups that are having economic problems."
Previously, international students
with F-1 status, those who receive financial support from private sources such as parents, could work only on campus and no more than 20 hours a week while school was in session.
Now students from the five countries who can prove they have been affected by the crisis can work more than 20 hours per week, either on or off campus.
The INS also reduced the minimum number of hours students must be enrolled from 12 to 6 for undergraduates and from 6 to 3 for graduate students.
The benefits, however, only are available to students who came to the United States on or before June 10, 1998 and who follow proper procedures.
Since the beginning of the crisis late last summer, Asian currencies, especially those from the five countries targeted by the INS, have lost significant value compared to the U.S. dollar. Thajai said that before the crisis, 2,500 Indonesian rupiah equaled one dollar. Today, 15,000 rupiah equals a dollar.
Johnston said that students must make an appointment with an adviser from International Students Services and follow the proper steps to receive the new benefits. She said that many students had assumed that the new rules were automatic and that all students were eligible.
"I'm fearful that a large percentage of students from these countries will start working without authorization and reduce their course load without prior approval," she said. "If they do this it will create problems in the long run."
Johnston said that enrollment of students from the five countries had decreased since the crisis began.
"It's a loss to the University not to have any group of international students here," she said. "They contribute so much to the environment."
For Tjhai, whose parents sell mopeds, the regulation change is good news. Business has not been good during the crisis, and her parents cannot afford to provide the same level of support. Two
weeks ago, she received special permission from the INS to work off campus.
She took a job at Perkins, 1711 W. 23rd St., but was worried that come fall she would not be able to support herself and to pay tuition working 20 hours a week. Now she will be able to work 40 hours a week while school is in session.
"I think the new rules will help a lot," she said. "My parents just can't support me here and let my brothers and sisters starve at home."
Fabian Dharmawan, a sophomore from Indonesia, also has experienced financial problems during the crisis. He said that his parents were not wealthy before the crisis. He plans to reduce his course load and apply for off-campus work so that he can continue his studies and help his parents.
"This program will help students survive and continue studying here," he said. "Studying here is an investment, because you get paid more with a degree from here. This education will pay off later."
Faculty salary increase is suggested
Regents propose 7.6 percent boost to begin in 1999
By Duane Wagler
Kansan staff writer
The Board of Regents voted Thursday to recommend a 7.6 percent salary increase for faculty during the Fall 1999 and Spring 2000 semesters.
The recommendation includes all unclassified employees—those who are not covered by the state Civil Service pay plan—the majority of whom are faculty.
The recommended increase will go to the governor and the Legislature. It then
will be discussed in January's legislative session, after which the Legislature will determine the actual increase. The Regents proposed a 5 percent increase last year, although the Legislature agreed to a 4 percent increase.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway said that he thought the request was a step in the right direction to remedy lagging salaries.
"I think it's a good recommendation," he said. "It shows the Board is concerned about faculty salaries."
Ken Havner, chairman of the Regents fiscal affairs committee, said that the move to increase faculty salaries had a sense of urgency.
"We really think it's vital that the gap of salaries be narrowed," he said. "We're going to lose the best and brightest of our faculty."
Sandra Gautt, assistant provost, has
tracked faculty members' reasons for leaving the University of Kansas from 1990 through 1996. Out of 123 faculty members who left during that period, roughly half cited salary as a reason for leaving, she said.
The recommended increase was the first stage of a three-year plan to bring salaries at Regents schools in line with peer institutions, said Marlin Rein, University director of budget and governmental relations. He said that faculty salaries at the University lagged 11 to 12 percent behind peer institutions.
Regional peer institutions are the University of Iowa, the University of Colorado and the University of Oklahoma.
The average faculty salary at the University of Colorado was $60,848, the University of Iowa's was $65,981 and the University of Oklahoma's was $54,037.
The average University of Kansas faculty salary was $55,618 for fiscal year 1998, 13.3 percent less than faculty salaries at peer institutions, which averaged $63,287.
In other business, the Regents approved the recommended 2.4 percent tuition increase for fiscal year 2000, the smallest general tuition increase in the last 15 years.
Tuition at the law school also will increase $100 per credit hour for the classes of 2001 and 2002. A $55 per credit hour charge will be added to a special master's program in business administration beginning in fiscal year 2000.
The Regents also voted to increase the salaries of the CEOs of the six Regents institutions for fiscal year 1999, which begins today. Chancellor Hemenway's salary will rise from $173,840 to $182,532, an increase of 5 percent.
City task force to stop Y2K bug problems
By Jenny Oakson Kansan staff writer
City Commission
On Jan. 1, 2000, computers and machines with embedded microchips may fail or malfunction because of the manner in which data is stored in them.
With the birth of the new millennium, Lawrence locals anticipate parties, resolutions and a new year to write on their checks, not computer malfunctions and automated machinery failure.
In the early days of computing, holes were punched into cards as a method of providing instructions. Each card had a limited number of spaces and room for information. To save space, programmers truncated years to two digits like 65 or 99 instead of 1965 or 1999. When the year 2000 rings in, some computers will not be able to make sense of 2000 and will malfunction or possibly crash.
"This is serious, but fixable," said Peter Garrett, computer programmer. "There is a global race to fix these programs and replace the embedded chips."
The Lawrence City Commission has
established a community information task force to handle the "millennium bug" or the Year 2000 problem (Y2K).
"Since the extent of local computer malfunctions are unknown, the Y2K task force must identify and rectify the flawed programs in Lawrence," said Commissioner Bonnie Augustine.
Nationally, the potential effects of the Y2K bug are malfunctions of automated jail cells, banks and safes, elevators, microwave ovens, signal lights, scoreboards, credit card authorization for fuel pumps, satellites controlling travel, clocks and alarm systems, telephone operations and electrical service.
Along with recognizing which computer programs are likely to fail in Lawrence, another Y2K task force objective will be to establish a multimedia public awareness and education campaign to alert citizens of potential problems.
"I want the city to understand how it will be affected and support community-wide partnerships to develop and test new strategies for a successful year 2000," Augustine said.
JULY 1998
SUN MON TUES WED THURS FRI SAT
1 2 3 4
SPIRIT OF KANSAS LAKE SHAWNEE TOPEKA.
WATCH FIRE WORKS FROM JOHNNY'S
5 SPIRIT OF KANSAS LAKE SHAWNEE TOPEKA.
6 7 8 9 10 11
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12 13 14 SPECIALIZED SUMMER SALE AT SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR AND BIKE SHOP. 15 16 DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE ANNUAL SIDEWALK SALE FROM SUN UP TO SUN DOWN 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 KU CREDIT UNION HOT DEALS. 9-2 P.M. AT CREDIT UNION
26 27 28 29 30 31
SPIRIT OF
KANSAS LAKE
SHOWN BY
TOPPEA
WATCH FIRE
WORK FROM
JOHNY'S
Party
Jumping
July 4 - Spirit of Kansas at Lake Shawnee, Topeka
July 4 - Come watch the city fireworks at Johnny's and enjoy great food and fun
July 5 - Spirit of Kansas at Lake Shawnee,Topeka
July 14 - Specialized Bicycle Sale at Sunflower Outdoor and Bike Shop
July 16 - Downtown Lawrence Annual Sidewalk Sale From Sunup to Sundown
July 25 - KU Credit Union/Laird Noller Hot Wheels & Cool Deals. 9 a.m.to 2 p.m.at KU Credit Union
July Calendar of Events
Section A·Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 1, 1998
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Petty crime wave strikes Robinson Center patrons
KORBAK
Bags and backpacks are left unattended in a hallway in Robinson Gymnasmium. Nine thefts have occurred there since June 2. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
By Jerry Jackson
Kansan staff writer
A recent string of thefts have plagued University of Kansas students and faculty at the Robinson Center since the beginning of the summer semester.
Nine thefts have occurred at Robinson since June 2, the KU Office of Public Safety reported. Everything from wallets to gym bags, and even a VCR, has been stolen.
Bob Lockwood, director of Robinson, said that student carelessness and misplaced trust were two of the major causes of the thefts.
The KU Office of Public Safety has responded to each of the reported thefts but has not charged any suspects. There were no witnesses for many of the thefts, but the KU police are pursuing leads.
"Students feel they should be able to trust people not to steal, but that isn't always the reality of the situation," Lockwood said. "Those students had to learn the lesson the hard way, and that's a tragedy."
Sgt. Troy Mailen said that many of the thefts could have been avoided if students were more responsible with their belongings.
"The majority of the gym bag and wallet thefts were unattended property," Mailen said.
"With all the entrances and exits, it's almost impossible to keep someone isn't supposed to be here out," Lockwood said.
Lockwood said that Robinson had taken numerous security measures in the past to limit such thefts,such as hiring five security guards and several students to check KUIDs.
Robinson has a single black and white security camera which monitors the back door, but Lockwood said it had not been very effective.
"We try to limit use of the facility to members of the KU family, such as students, faculty, staff and their family members with proper passes," Lockwood said.
Unfortunately, with KU students and the hundreds of summer campers using the gym facilities, not everyone's identification can be checked.
Mailen said that the values of the losses ranged from $30 to as much as $770.
"It's hard to identify people on the monitor, and the camera has no recording capabilities," he said.
The message for students from Robinson and the KU Office of Public Safety is as simple as the sign posted outside the gym: "Please store all personal belongings in a locker."
Affordable health care available
By Leslie Potter
Kansan staff writer
Affordable health care is available to students at the University of Kansas.
Students enrolled in five or more credit hours in the summer semester are eligible for free evaluations by physicians at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
The coverage is prepaid by campus fees paid at enrollment, said Randall W. Rock, chief physician at Watkins.
Students enrolled in fewer than five credit hours are assessed the remainder of the health fee when they make an appointment.
"Students who have just graduated and are still living in Lawrence this summer can still use Watkins by paying the student health fee," Rock said. "The student health fee for the entire summer without being enrolled is $49.50."
Other services offered at Watkins, such as immunization, laboratory testing and the pharmacy, are not covered by the student health fee.
"These services tend to be 20 to 50
Students with health insurance can have Watkins bill their insurance company, Rock said.
percent less than what you would pay in the community," Rock said.
Students without health insurance can apply for the Student Health Policy. The policy, which was adopted by Student Senate, covers Watkins services and referrals to other hospitals, Rock said. The insurance costs $48 per month for students 25 years old and younger and $91.67 per month for students 26 and older. The business office at Watkins has policy information and enrollment materials.
The Lawrence Douglas County Health Department does not offer emergency care or treat illnesses except for sexually transmitted diseases, Schnitker said.
Students also can receive affordable health care elsewhere.
The Lawrence Douglas County Health Department, 336 Missouri St., offers immunization, pregnancy testing, sexually transmitted disease testing and treatment, HIV testing and counseling and gynecological services.
family and their kids are not covered by Watkins or if a student isn't eligible for Watkins' services, then they are welcome to come."
"We encourage students to go to Watkins since they usually pay fees to use Watkins," said Barbara Schnitker, director of nurses at Lawrence Douglas County Health Department. "But if a student has a
Planned Parenthood, 1420 Kasold Drive, provides gynecological services, pregnancy testing, STD testing and treatment and HIV testing.
"Since this is a college town, there is a need for Planned Parenthood, the Lawrence Douglas County Health Department, and Watkins," Rogers said. "These organizations are great for students who don't have health insurance or are on a budget."
"The fee for our services depends on your income level," said Shelley Rogers, coordinator of Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri. "So for college students it's pretty minimal."
Rogers said that chlamydia and HPV, the virus that causes genital warts, were prevalent in college towns and that Planned Parenthood recommends that partners get tested.
Got Free Time?
Volunteer it!
THE CENTER FOR
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UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Help yourself by helping others this summer. The Lawrence Summer Food Program and the Jubilee Cafe are searching for volunteers to serve homeless individuals and underprivileged children throughout the summer.
WHEN: Jubilee Cafe: Tues. and Fri., 6:00 a.m.to 9:30 a.m.
Lawrence Summer Food Program: Mon-Fri, Lunches
HOW CAN I VOLUNTEER: Contact The Center for Community Outreach @ 864-4073
STUDENT
SENATE
Wednesday, July 1, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Fiesta heats up summer
Partiers enjoy food and music at church event
PARKS
Les Danzantes de St. John perform a traditional Mexican dance at St. John' 17th Annual Mexican Festival. Photo by beth Janes / KANSAT
By Beth Janes
Kansan staff writer
Mix 400 pounds of ground beef, 200 pounds of rice, 200 pounds of beans and 24 gallons of hot sauce. Add some games, traditional Mexican dancers, music, a parking lot full of people and a summer-style simmer in 100 degree heat. The result: St. John's 17th Annual Mexican Fiesta
More than 500 people from Lawrence and surrounding areas braved the heat and packed the church grounds that 100 volunteers had transformed into fiesta central.
Music could be heard several blocks away Saturday night from the parking lot of St. John The Evangelist Catholic Church, 1229 Harmont Street.
Early in the evening, fiesta-goers ate tacos, burtis rottos and tamales and played games while "Los Danzantes de St. John" performed traditional Mexican dances. At about 8 p.m. the band Las Estrellas played while some of the crowd danced in front of the stage.
Mason Galloway, a KU graduate, and Seth Peattie, Plymouth, Minn., senior, live across the street and said they enjoyed the festival.
"It's neat to see an ethnic side to Lawrence," Galloway said. "The town strikes me as pretty homogeneous, so it's great to be here and celebrate the ethnicity and diversity."
Aurora Marin, Leoti junior,
attends church at St. John's. She
was on dunk tank duty Saturday and said that because of the heat, more kids wanted to be dunked rather than dunk others.
"My favorite part of the fiesta is the kids," she said. "I like making them happy and seeing them feel like they have accomplished something."
The fiesta began 17 years ago to raise funds for the then-new Corpius Christi Church, 1100 Kasold Drive. The members of St. John's continued holding the fiesta as a fund-raiser for their church.
Loretta Chavez attends church at St. John's and has been involved with the fiesta since the beginning. She led a core group of 12 women who began making tamales in February and froze them until the fiesta. They had been working all week preparing the 400 pounds of ground beef and mass quantities of other ingredients making traditional Mexican fare.
"We started mini, but now we're"
big. We have a big community and other churches come out and support us," Chavez said. "It is great to see everybody working together and having a good time."
Lawrence resident Buddy Langford has helped with the flesta since 1985. He predicted the festival would raise between $7,000 and $12,000.
"We are expecting a crowd," he said Friday while taking a break from setting up tables. "Three years ago it rained like heck, and the entertainment was washed out, but we still sold out of food. We know we have a product that people want."
Langford said that along with church members, people from other churches, Haskell Indian Nations University, the university of Kansas and Lawrence supported the fiesta.
"Nobody really signs up to help set up, you just know they are going to be here," he said. "I just enjoy working with the people. It's really a community event."
Singers perform at benefit
Jeff Smith, tenor for Measure X Measure, organized the project. Fellow group member and bass singer Cardell Edwards said that the purpose of the benefit was to raise money for Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Douglas County and to showcase some a capella talent in Lawrence.
"We're here to support David (a member of Measure X Measure), who is my daughter's teacher at Century School in Lawrence, " said Erin Spiridigliozzo, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "It's a great cause and the community really appreciates the arts and cultural aspects of the city of Lawrence."
The music began vibrating the
Ortega made it sound as if the group was headed straight for success, awaiting a secret phone call and moving to New York in September. Could there be a record deal in the future?
"I can't say," Ortega whispered.
"I don't want to jinx it."
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1. 1:50, 4:30, 7:15
Thirty-five minutes into the show, Measure X Measure took over for Slow Motion. The group's music was more fast-paced than Slow Motion and with the crowd already loosened up, the dancing and clapping went on non-stop.
Anderson said Measure X Measure did a lot of private shows for corpo-
"People really like us," said Paul "Bud" Anderson, tenor of Measure X Measure. "And they respond to us really well."
Kansan staff writer
"Measure X Measure and mpact! are both a capella, which means all vocal," Edwards said before the show. "Slow Motion is really an R & B band, but are performing a capella tonight."
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"We're unique because we're multi-cultural," said Roger Ortega, one of the four group members. "We have more sound than All For One is what we're told. I think we've got a beautiful pop balance like Color Me Bad, and that will take us all the way to the top."
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floors at 7:20 p.m., with Slow Motion. The group began to loosen up the crowd with an original ballad called Love Me, Don't Leave Me. By their third song, audience members were clapping and letting it loose to Slow Motion who compares themselves to the popular Color Me Bad.
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"It's been a ball," said Bob Anderson, father of Measure X Measure's tenor. "They all have some talent and are going to go places. It's one step at a time."
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After a brief intermission, mpact! took center stage and shook the house with their choir-like lyrics and intense choreography. Mpact! was named National Champions and Audience Favorites of the Harmony Sweepstakes in 1996. The group has appeared with Ray Charles, Bobby McFerrin, Spike Lee and other celebrities. The band just wrapped up its second CD and has been busy touring.
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"We're very usable," Edwards, senior member of the group, said. "We don't have a bunch of equipment. We can just get out there and sing."
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Todd Moore, a case manager at Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Douglas County had not received a check for the benefit, however, he was an estimated $500 profit from the show.
Edwards and Anderson met other band members through association within their choir. All members of Measure X Measure attended the University of Kansas, and four members of the group performed as Eight To One at the University's Rock Chalk Revue from 1992 to 1996.
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y
V
Section A · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 1, 1998
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Brass company's performance combines music, education
By Mariana Paiva
Kansan staff writer
The Chestnut Brass Company gave a historical lesson using music last night at the Lied Center.
About 450 people saw the company's variety of instruments including reproductions and real historical brass instruments.
"For this concert we tried to choose music as thrilling as possible. We wanted the students to enjoy and think, 'Maybe I can learn one day to play fun music like them.'" Hesse said.
The quintet came to the University as part of the Midwestern Music Camp's summer concert series. The group includes founders Bruce Barrie, trumpet; and Jay Krush, tuba; as well as Larry Zimmerman, trombone; Susan Sexton, trumpet; and Marian Hesse, horn and assistant professor of music and dance at the University.
work and give information about their backgrounds, but we try not to lecture," Hesse said.
"When we perform to students, we explain how the instruments
Their explanations often received laughs and applause from the audience as the members of the company explained the history of the instruments and acted at the same time.
"I only play piano, so the explanations helped me to understand the performance better, especially about the brass instruments used during the Renaissance period," said Katie Voegeli, Rose Hill high school student and camp participant.
The diversity of the company is not restricted to its instruments. Some of the pieces included on the repertoire last night were I get a kick out of you by Cole Porter, the overture to the Barber of Seville,
The company was created in 1977, when Bruce Barrie and Jay Krush started playing together on the streets of Philadelphia. The group's name is an homage to the corner where they used to perform: 17th and Chestnut streets. Since then, they have performed in different parts of the United States, France, Germany, Italy, the Caribbean, Canada and Mexico. The Chestnut Brass Company presents more than 100 performances each year.
Want a cheap drink? By Rebecca Ulanoff, Kanean staff writer
Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire W: 25-cent Icehouse draws, $1 other draws $2 well drinks. Sun.: $1.50 draws
Brown Bear Brewery 729 Massachusetts M & R: $1 pints brewery beer. W: $1.25 pints of wheat, F & S: $2.25 pints.
Eighth Street Tap Room 801 New Hampshire M: $2 cocktails. T: $2.75 premium cocktails. W: $1.75 bottles. R: $2 wells. Sun: $1.75 draws.
Fatso's 1016 Massachusetts M: $2 pitchers of Bud Light. T: $1.50 Rolling Rock Longneck. F: $2 any bottle.
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Quinton's Bar and Deli 615 Massachusetts M: $1.75 23 oz. Pete's Wicked Summer Brew. T: $1.75 imports. W: 23 oz. Fat Tire and Sunshine Wheat draw. R: 23 oz. Boulevard Ale and Wheat. F: $2.50 23 oz. margarita. S: 2-for-1 wells.
Replay Lounge 946 Massachusetts Every night: $1.25 cans of Schiltz, Pabst, Hams, Olde Style. W: $2 almost anything. R and F: $1.50 bottles of Mickey's and Lone Star.
Sandbar 117 E. 8th T: $1 anything with a $3 cover. W: $2 20 oz. Bass. R: $1.75 20 oz. Bud Light and Honey Brown.
Teller's 746 Massachusetts W: $2.50 import beers. R: $1.50 Boulevard draws.
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Call 864-4358 or come by 119 Stauffer-Flint
Make sure to get your classified ad in the Kansan Back to school edition, the largest Kansan edition of the year.
Kansan
Wednesday, July 1, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 7
Dyche Hall's animal display brings a panorama of life
A sleeping arctic fox is on display at the Natural History Museum. The museum has been the home of several varieties of stuffed animals since 1902. Photo by Joseph Griffin/KANSAN.
...
By Elissa Harris Kansan staff writer
A kingdom of animals makes the Natural History Museum its home, and the animals are the reason for Dyche Hall's existence.
If you turn right upon entering the panorama, you will begin an adventure that starts at the North Pole and moves south to the Equator. The more than 100 animals and plants, which stand under a painted partly cloudy sky, are from across North America.
The exhibit was created by Lewis Lindsay Dyche, former professor of zoology, to represent Kansas at the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago.
The state legislature was so impressed by the exhibit that they allotted about $55,000 to construct Dyche Hall to house the exhibit at the University of Kansas, said Brad Kemp, the museum's assistant director of public affairs. The building opened in 1902.
The exhibit is educational, said Ruth Gennrich, museum director of public education, because the animals are life size, portrayed in their natural
habitat and are right before your eyes.
"KU students usually come only when it is assigned, mostly biology students and art students, but once we get them in off the street, they realize what a great place it is," Gennrich said.
A professor at the University from 1882 to 1914, Dyche was
considered one of the best taxidermists in his field.
An article in the July 15, 1893 edition of Scientific American, referred to Dyche's work as one of the most remarkable exhibits to be seen at the Fair.
In his own 1893 article about taxidermy in Scientific American, Dyche wrote that the taxidermist should know his animal
so well that he could produce a good sketch or small clay model of it from memory.
Dyche's animals are still the most popular exhibit among the museum's visitors, Kemp said.
Because the building's age doesn't allow for airtight enclosure, the staff faces the challenging task of keeping the animals in decent shape, as well as preventing the occasional live animal from taking stage among the exhibited animals. The most recent visitor flew.
"We were having a dinner party in the Panorama and I saw a bat flying around in there," Kemp said.
Kemp sees the museum's recent acquisitions of dinosaur fossils, which are in need of housing, as analogous to the situation in 1893 that built Dyche Hall.
"The growth of the museum has been punctuated by this sort of opportunity," Kemp said.
The museum is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. The panorama is located on the main level.
U.S. jet fires on Iraqi missile site
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - An American F-16 fired on an Iraqi missile site that had threatened British warplanes, jolting relations between the two nations after several months of relative calm.
The incident occurred about 12:30 a.m.yesterday, daylight hours in Iraq.
"The message is very simple: Our forces are going to protect themselves," Defense Secretary William Cohen said in a Pentagon briefing. "This is an act of self-defense."
Cohen said he hoped that the incident was an isolated one and
did not signal a renewal of tensions. He also said that threats to America's or its allies' aircraft would be met with a very vigorous response.
In Baghdad, an Iraqi official said the incident proved the United States' aggressiveness.
"This is an unjustified, aggressive act. No radar was opened," an official at the Ministry of Culture and Information said on condition of anonymity.
It was the first time U.S. jets fired on an Iraqi radar site since November 1996.
The aircrafts were participating in Operation Southern Watch, the
mission established after the 1991 Persian Gulf War. The mission's purpose is to deny Iraq the use of large portions of its air space.
The U.S. Air Force F-16CJ fighter was one of four protecting four British Tornadoes flying a monitoring mission over Iraq's southern no-fly zone. Two U.S. Navy EA6B electronic warfare planes were also nearby, officials said.
An Iraqi radar located near the southern city of Al-Basra illuminated the British jets, a move that is seen as an intention to fire, said Col. Richard Bridges, Pentagon representative.
One F-16 shot at the radar site
with a HARM missile. No fire was returned, and all aircraft returned safely to their bases.
It was not clear whether the Iraqi missile site had been hit, Cohen said. British officials said they believed it was destroyed.
Vice President Al Gore, speaking to reporters at the White House, said there should be no rush to assume the incident was a deliberate provocation.
"But just so the message is clear, we are going to continue to patrol, and anytime there is any kind of threatening act we will take decisive action to respond immediately," Gore said.
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25th & Iowa
Section A · Page 8
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. July 1. 1998
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Poverty links to discrimination
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A man chops off his wife's hands and feet because she disobeyed him. A prominent Christian leader is driven to suicide in protest of discrimination against religious minorities.
Unfortunately, these are two recent, real examples of the situation of many women and minorities in Pakistan. Also unfortunately, the first thought many people have after reading about these atrocities is "those crazy Islamic fundamentalists." In reality these are not the acts of an Islamic fundamentalist or even of a true Muslim.
Contrary to popular belief within and outside Pakistan, women and minorities are not disadvantaged because Pakistan is an Islamic state but because it is a less developed state.
This summer I have been involved in extensive, hands-on research of human rights abuses against Pakistan's women and minorities. Many of my preconceived notions about the causes and solutions to these problems have been shattered.
Shocking violence affects
mainly the lower socioeconomic classes. Rural males often have minimal or no schooling and engage in menial labor.Because they feel the need to control some part of their lives, the women in their families
their families suffer
These women also are poorly educated, financially dependent upon their husbands or fathers and unaware of their legal and religious rights. In a society devoid of a real system of social
Commentary
services, women bear the bru**
Nadia
Mustafa
editor@kansan.com
services, women bear the brunt.
Last week, I met a 21-year-old woman who recently had completed four years of rehabilitation for severe facial and upper body burns. When she was a 16-year-old newlywed in a poor, rural village outside Islamabad,
her husband set her on fire with kerosene because she tried to leave the house against his wishes. Today, she retains permanent scars, can no longer blink her eyes and her ears have melted away. But her husband roams free.
There are not enough strong institutions in place to punish the perpetrators of this violence. Pakistan has only a handful of non-governmental organizations engaged in the struggle for human rights. They work amid corrupt, under-funded law enforcement agencies that disastrously misinterpret Islam.
Last year hundreds of families lost their homes when a Christian village in the province of Punjab was looted and burned by mobs that were instigated supposedly by local police. This was not an attempt at ethnic cleansing but a land-grab aimed at an easy target.
Before being rash in our judgments about Pakistan and similar societies, we must recall lessons from American history before the Civil War. Fifty years into our
Pakistan
Islamabad
Afghanistan
Iran
India
Saudi Arabia
Karachi
AREA OF
DETAIL
Indian Ocean
development as a nation, women had almost no rights. Native Americans and African Americans were victims of violent discrimination.
In light of this analysis, perhaps the United States should be helping Pakistan instead of imposing economic sanctions. But that is another debate. For now, it is important that we begin examining people and situations in full instead of automatically blaming the Islamic fundamentalists.
Mustafa is an Topeka sophomore in journalism and political science.
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1
Tuesday, July 1, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 9
Summer volunteers bring cafe jubilation
BANKS, PA. A
Julie Numrich, Student Executive Committee Chairwoman, prepares scrambled eggs for customers at the Jubilee Cafe. The cafe is open from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. every Tuesday and Friday. Photo by Joseph Griffin/KANSAN
By Liz Wristen
Kansan Staff Writer
The smell of scrambled eggs and blueberry pancakes drift through the brick walls of the Jubilee Cafe.
The cafe is full of customers eating eggs cooked-to-order, hash browns, pancakes and biscuits with gravy. Glasses are filled with orange juice and coffee faster than the beverages can be made. Extra helpings are available, and everything is offered at no charge.
The Jubilee Cafe, located at the Trinity Episcopal Church, 1011 Vermont St., is open Tuesday and Friday mornings from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. for anyone who needs a free meal. The cafe serves many homeless people, and the service is run by volunteers and church coordinators.
Volunteers include members of Student Senate and other KU students.
Senate has been working with the Jubilee program for the past few years as a way to provide service to the Lawrence community. This is the first time that Senate members have continued to volunteer for the cafe during the summer.
"It's a unique program, and it stresses dignity," said Chris Hess, co-director of the Center for Community Outreach.
"This program is a chance for volunteers to wait on the customers and then have the opportunity to eat with them. It really gets you to see their humanity."
The cafe opened Oct. 14, 1994 with the help of two social workers and a few volunteers who were interested in opening a restaurant for the homeless. They had attended a meeting
given by a chaplain who started a similar cafe in Iowa.
The meeting also was attended by Joe Alford, the Episcopal Chaplain of Canterbury House. Canterbury House is a campus ministry program associated with the Trinity Episcopal Church consisting of four students. The students, along with Senate members and other volunteers, run the cafe twice a week.
Clark Keffer, a church volunteer and member of the campus ministry program, has volunteered since the cafe's opening in 1994 and has only missed three mornings.
"I was interested in the program, and I had the time to do it," Keffer said. "I started volunteering because I decided that I should get out and do more with the community."
The program began with a $500 grant from the Episcopal Diocese and, originally, only was open for service on Tuesday mornings.
Since then, the University of Kansas Fraternity and Sorority Foundation donated $4,000 to the program with the stipulation that the cafe would open for a second day each week. The cafe began opening on Friday mornings on April 10.
During the regular school year, customers are waited on by volunteers. A smaller number of volunteers help during the summer, and customers go through a line to pick up their food, said Erika Nutt, social welfare senator and co-director of CCO. For this reason, the cafe takes on the nickname "Jubilee Cafeteria" during the summer.
Students who are interested in volunteering at the Jubilee Cafe may contact the Center for Community Outreach at 864-4073.
KU drinking survey on tap
Data would be drawn from student queries
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
A proposed campus-wide student survey on alcohol use will give educators needed fresh data in their efforts to prevent alcohol related problems, University of Kansas educators said.
The survey was requested by Chancellor Robert Hemenway in late Spring 1998. Julie Francis, health educator with the student health services department, said that the survey would focus on alcohol use. The survey will take place sometime late in the fall semester.
Deb Teeter, director of institutional research and planning, said that survey specifics would not be determined until a committee meets later this month.
Although there is speculation that recent problems with underage drinking—such as last April's alco
hol-related death of Overland Park freshman Lisa Rosel. spurred the decision, Francis said administrators and educators needed fresh data
"Right now our statistics are so old that we don't even use them," Francis said.
An example is the alcohol-use program that Francis created for the New Student Orientation Making Smart Choices program, which states that about two-thirds of college students nationwide do not drink alcohol.
The statement may be misinterpreted to apply directly to the University of Kansas.
Candy Reeves, Lenexa freshman, attended yesterday's session. She said she was happy that so many students did not drink, but had thought the figure applied directly to the University.
Francis said that health educators tried to point out that the two-tirds figure, which comes from the 1995 College National Health Risk Behavior Survey, was a national average. She said the figure included low-to-moderate alcohol users, defined as those who do not drink five or more drinks in a row.
Francis said that she did not like using the figure because of the definitions and because it was not specific to the University, but had no choice because the most recent University alcohol-use survey was six years old. Francis said that using national figures was preferable to using old data when convincing students that drinking was unnecessary.
"The perception is huge that most people here drink all of the time," Francis said. "It's important for people to realize that they don't and that you don't need to in order to fit in that situation."
Francis said the programs incorporate recent incidents, including an alcohol-related death, to illustrate that they could happen here. She said such incidents may have contributed to the approval of a new survey, which her department had been seeking for a long time.
Hemenway, who approved the proposed study, said that up-to-date data was necessary for informed decision making.
"We're a major education and research institution, and if we can't do the kind of research that is necessary to make good policy decisions then how can we expect anyone else to," he said.
If your coffee cup were ever to be empty, we'd fire the server.
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Wednesday July 1, 1998
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Free
Legal Services
for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
Jo Hardesty, Director
STUDENT
SENATE
HOROSCOPES
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today's Birthday:July 1
You may come up with a get-rich-quick scheme today. If so, sit on it a while longer. It may be a get-broke-quick scheme in disguise. The best way for you to profit is to cut spending. Find a way for your boss to do that, and you could get a raise.
P
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Do not let another person's panic force you to go too fast this morning. You are better able to judge the seriousness of the situation. Put off any major decisions until later this afternoon. An older person's crazy scheme is doomed to failure. Leave it alone.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Your energy level is high today, but your judgment may not be very accurate. Definitely do not spend anybody else's money on a risky deal this morning. Nothing will come of it. You may have to postpone travel tonight because of a prior commitment.
2
Cancer (June 22-July 22)
The morning is a flurry of activity. If you can avoid getting too excited, you will make a better deal. Your best option is to wait until this afternoon after the dust has settled. Agreements made later have a better chance of producing the results intended.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
You will be in the mood to get out and about this morning. If you are doing errands, save time and money by calling ahead. There is bound to be a mix-up at work today. Take care that it is not your fault. Review everything a couple of times before showing it to the boss.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
C
You are smart, but today might still present a challenge. Do not let anybody push you faster than you want to go. Your reputation for perfection is at stake. You will be done with the worst of it by this afternoon. As a reward, go out with a friend this evening.
TALKING
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Get somebody else to take care of practical matters this morning. You will be in the mood to be creative. Take care not to break something, though. You could make quite a mess. Pay back a debt this evening before your friend has to ask you for it.
You may be confused by a task you are trying to learn this morning. Even worse, a competitor could use your temporary lapse of attention to get ahead. Do not worry. Delegate part of your workload to a partner this afternoon, and win back whatever you have lost.
LAW OFFICER
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
A romantic interlude this morning could get you into trouble. Do not overspend or be late to work. You should see your sweetie early instead of later, though. You may not have as much time to play this afternoon or evening.
LAUTERGEWISSEN
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Do not try to argue with a hotheaded roommate this morning. Your prior mistake could be part of the problem. Things should cool down by this afternoon. Plan a special dinner that is within your budget. Cook a gourmet delight instead of going out.
SCORPIO
Aquarius (Jan 20-Feb.18)
Contact a sibling who always cheers you up this morning. A different point of view could be just the stimulation you need to get going again. You may have to make a decision regarding your house or its contents this evening. Consider an unusual option.
Somebody else's mistake could put money in your pocket this morning. Be watching for a bargain in partly damaged merchandise. A sibling's plans may be thwarted this afternoon. Provide a shoulder to cry on. Do not buy your lottery ticket until late night.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
SPORTS BRIEFS
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
Brown, who played in 1990-91 and broke the school record for most career three-point field goals, was arrested for battery April 1 at his residence in the 2400 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police records show.
Former University of Kansas mens' basketball standout Terry Brown will be tried for battery at 8:45 a.m. today in Douglas County District Court, 1100 Massachusetts St.
Brown was put on probation March 31 after pleading guilty to a January 1 battery charge, Douglas County District Court records show.
The alleged victim in the current case, a 22-year-old Lawrence woman, is the same woman Brown pleaded guilty to battering Jan. 1, police reports show.
Former basketball star to be tried for battery
Assistant District Attorney Rick Trapp said he could not discuss the case until the trial began.
—Ronnie Wachter
University of Kansas basketball stars Paul Pierce and Raef LaFrentz both were expected to be picked in the top five of the 1998 NBA draft, but the results left Pierce with mixed feelings
LaFrentz picked second in draft; Pierce is No.10
PETER CUNNINGHAM
Pierce had been seated for second pick in many mock drafts.
鱼
LaFrentz:
LaFrentz was picked after
Michael Olowakandi, first pick by the Los Angeles Clippers, and Mike
Bibby, a guard from the University of Arizona who was picked second by the Vancouver Grizzlies.
"I'm extremely excited to be drafted by the Denver Nuggets." LaFrentz said. "It will be great to stay in Biz 12 territory. I'm just
excited to be in the NBA and very happy to be taken by the Nuggets." Head coach Roy Williams also was pleased with LaFrentz's place in the draft.
Pierce:
"Denver is really where he wanted to go." Williams said.
"Dan isel appreciates the type of player Raef is. It's seldom that you get to choose where you want to go, but Raef basically got to do just that."
When the Los Angeles Clippers selected Olowakandi, Libby was ripe for picking by Vancouver, which may have planned to select Pierce. The Nuggets were set on LaFrentz, and Pierce had expressed to Toronto his desire not to play for them. Pierce also told Sacramento, which had the No.7 pick, and Milwaukee, which had the No.9 pick, not to pursue him. Golden State, Dallas and Philadelphia, picks five, six and eight respectively, had more pressing holes to fill, leaving Boston to select Pierce 10th.
"It was a little disappointing, but that's the way things go in the draft," Pierce said. "Boston is a great situation, they have great players. I think it's a playoff team that can really build.
The top 10 picks were Olowakandi;
Bibby, LaFrentz; Antawn Jamison,
Toronto; Vince Carter, Golden State;
Robert Traylor, Dallas; Jason
Williams, Sacramento; Larry
Hughes, Philadelphia; Dirk Nowitzki,
Milwaukee; and Pierce.
-Melinda Weaver
GIVE ME A "K"
JULIE KRIECHER
Jennifer Sields, a student from Los Cruces, N.M., leads her peers in a cheer. The participants are at the University for a cheerleading camp sponsored by the Universal Cheerleaders Association. The camp is for high school and junior-high students throughout Kansas and Missouri. The students practiced outside Robinson Center throughout the week. Photo by Roger Nomer / KANSAN
Cedarwood Apartments Now Leasing Four Bedroom Duplexes
- Newly Redecorated Units -Dishwasher
- Central Heat & Air Conditioning
- Low Utilities -Close to Mall
- On KU Bus Route
On site swimming Pool
SCORECATS
Washer & Dryer hook up
CALL Karin
TODAY
843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Avenue
ENGRAVING
On Campus!
Name Tags
Nameplates
Awards
Logos
Plaques
Special Orders
And More
Low Prices in a Convenient Location
- Jaybowl * Kansas Union * Level 1 *
* University of Kansas * 785-864-3545 *
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa 749-2424
LAWRENCE'S ONLY WOMEN'S FITNESS CENTER WE HAVE IT ALL AND ARE CLOSE TO CAMPUS!
- Cardiovascular Equipment
- All New Strength Equipment
- High/Low Impact
- Step & Water Aerobics
- Personal Fitness Training
- Boxing Class
- Open 7 Days a week
- 15 tans for only $30
• 20 minute sessions
• Non-members welcome
Exp. 7/15/98
TANNING BUY 10 TANS GET 5 FREE
SUMMER FITNESS
3 Month Membership Only $89 + tax Exp. 7/15/98
2 Months Free For The First 25 New V.I.P. Members By July 15th
Wednesday, July 1, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 11
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements 108 Personate 110 Business Personate 118 On Campus 120 Announcements 120 Travel 127 Entertainment 130 Lost and Found
200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional Services 235 Typhoid Services
300s
Moverhandler
305 For Sale
315 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
320 Rentals Equipment
330 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
345 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Mobiliehoused
370 Wanted to Buy
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358
400s Real Estate
400s Real Estate
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
415 Condos for Rent
415 Home for Sale
420 Real Estate for Sale
420 Roommate Wanted
The harm will not knowledgeably accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons by color, gender, age, color, race, sexual orientation or disability. The harm also does not accept advertising that a variety of university regulations on law and regulation of the Federal Housing Act of 1958 which allows to advertise, any preference, identification or discrimination based on sex, color, gender, race, skin color, race, and/or disability is not such a penalty, imprisonment or discrimination.
The harm will not knowledgeably accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons by color, gender, age, color, race, sexual orientation or disability. The harm also does not accept advertising that a variety of university regulations on law and regulation of the Federal Housing Act of 1958 which allows to advertise, any preference, identification or discrimination based on sex, color, gender, race, skin color, race, race, and/or disability is not such a penalty, imprisonment or discrimination.
H
100s Announcements
105 - Personals
Self defense or Karate expert need to give personal lessons. Call 841-308 398
120 - Announcements
Beds, Desks, Bookscares, Chester Drawers
Everything But Ice, 938 Mass.
First Call For Help
Counseling Center
Telephone/In person
24 Hours
841-2345
men women
205 - Help Wanted
200s Employment
BASS PLAYER WANTED for Top 40 private party band. All styles. $100 per night. Michael Beers, 749-3649
Superstar cook wanted. Baute. Saute experience preferential for bourbon & beef benefits. 89th Call (911) 362-8070.
Need someone to watch kids and in the evenings: 10pm - 8am. Free room and board. Must have references. If interested, please call 542-2951 after 4pm.
Part-time nanny needed for 20 mo. old twins, in bur home. Experience w /toddlers required, begin August 18th, 8-5 M, W, F. Willing to consider 2 part-time persons, contact Diane at 864-6383.
Therapist needed for eleven year old boy with Autism. Must like children and be willing to learn applied behavior analysis procedures. Training provided. Please call Selma (816) 361-3914.
[communityWorks Inc] is currently hiring personal assistants for day, evening, weekend, and holiday work with people with hearing loss. Starting May 1, we offer City and eavenworth openings. [913] 314-3816 ext.302.
Part-time Mother's Helper/Cook for busy family this coming school year. Meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking and light housekeeping are required. Help take care of children. Pleasant home environment based on experience. Must have own car. Work to start in August, but can start immediately. Req. Experience with work experiences and references to J. Burch, 490 W.15th St. Suite 102, Lawrence, KS 60494.
Programming Assistant/Office Assistant (Student Hourly rate of 5.60 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center (Language Labs). Responsible for training students, using computer equipment for data entry, managing video materials, typing and keeping inventory of supplies, other light office work, and description of computer applications and application at 490 Wesco Hall. For information, call 684-7453; Deadline August 14, 1998.
laborarian (Student Hourly rate of 5.75 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center (Language Labs) responsibilities include assisting lab patrons, using computer equipment for data entry, duplicating audio and video materials, typing and keeping inventory of supplies, accessioning all materials in conjunction with supervisors, conducting project in conjunction with supervisor. Pick a description with required qualifications and application at 4096 Wesco Hall. For information, call 864-4785. Deadline July 6, 1998.
205 - Help Wanted
DISABLED STUDENTS
DISABLED STUDENTS
If you are experiencing problems receiving needed, effective accommodations at KU (e.g. notetakers), dial 842-3882. Sharing your experiences may help to improve the system. Call between 8-noon or 6-10 pm.
Reliable start seller needed as nanny for Christian, KU staff family with 3 kids (6, 12, y/o) a start. Aug 17 thru June 99; working 25-30 hr(w Mon-Fri: 3-00:9:00 p.m. + rare kwd.) Duties include supervising kids, starting dinner, help with laundry & chauffeuring. Must be non-smkr PROMPT Benefits include salaries, meals, laundry-facility, and private apt, available. May live in or out. Prefer female majoring in HDLF education, nursing. Perfect job for Grad student. 749-0325.
$$$$$ Cash for Employment$$$$$
Kansas and Burge Unions' Food Services
Catering Department
Hiring Caterers for: Thursday, July 9, 1988
30am-10pm. Thursday, July 23, 1988 30am-10pm.
$5.15/hr. Will pay in cash on day following employment. Applicants must be able to stand for long periods, willing to follow instructions, code nen, speak English, to follow work. Apply Kansas and Burge Union's Personnel Office, Level 5, 13th and Oread. Qualified person will be hired at time of application A//EEO
Computer Assistant (Student Hourly rate of 6.50 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center (Language Labs). Responsibilities include performing routine maintenance on Macintosh and Windows computers, installing computer software, installing hardware and upgrade patches, trouble shooting hardware, assisting in the maintenance of the Centrs' Web page, assisting with computer workshops and other special projects at the direction of a team, providing description with required qualifications and application at 4008 Wescoe Hall. For information, call 844-7832. Deadline July 6, 1998.
Full-time position for retail computer software sales and web page maintenance.
Min. 30-40/hrs. now thru fall. Alternating weekends and retail experience needed. Apply at Jayhawk Bookstore.
X
300s Merchandise
Chair Director, part time, Sept. May. Perry UMC
box 35, KPS 6903 (785) 266-4697
305 - For Sale
$ $ $ $ $
---
360-Miscellaneous
MIRACLE VIDEO - Summer Sale. ALL ADULT
VIDEO TAPES $12.98 & up. Come in at 1910
Haskell Ave, or call 841-7504
O
LARGER/FIRMER BREASTS !!!!
Safe and Affordable alternative to implants!
Fast Results! Toll-Free 1-877-6-BREAST
S
235 - Typing Services
225 - Professional Services
Juicers
Shenugui
Juicers
Shenyparks
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.
AAA Resumes, Cover Letters, Mock Interviews,
Job Counseling Available. Make the most
solid investment you can in your future, invest
some time in yourself. Call (785) 351-2170.
STUDENT SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR $5.40/7.00/hour, 20 hours/wk. Weekend. Applications received until position filled. Duties: Operate telephone operator's console and provide facade and maintain directive directory information. Update and maintain directive directory information for resources. Other duties as assigned. Qualifications: Valid KU enrollment and valid written instructions; ability to understand and carry out verbal and written instructions; ability to speak the English language; ability to work weekends and either morning or evenings; Available to work during semester breaks and summer recess; willing to be "on-call" as needed. Pre-requisite: Bachelor's degree in屯台board experience; plan to be enrolled at KU campus mum of one year from start date. Obtain and complete an application from the Networking and telecommunications Services reception desk. Experience of Kansas Ellsworth Annex, 1736 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 66044; Phone: 913-864-9100; Contact: Amr Emmy/OE/AA.
GAME GUY
TRAFFIC-DUI'S PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of DODD G. STROBE
Donald G. Strobe State University
16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation
VIDEO GAMES
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
- Sony PlayStation
STUDENT STOCKROOM ASSISTANT . $5.90-7.40/hour, 20hrs/wEEK. Deadline: Applications received until position filled. Duties: Inventory responsibilities including stocking, shipping/warehousing and inventory job (staging), maintaining inventory仓库 database information and making deliveries. Required Qualifications: Valid KU enrollment and valid KS driver's license; ability to spell and recognize English numerals; ability to work independently and adhering to deadlines; available to M-F: between 8am-5pm. Must be able to lift at least 50 lbs on a consistent basis. Preferred Qualification: Master's degree in business or personal computer experience, as well as relevant telecommunications experience. Obtain and complete an application from the Networking and Telecommunications Services reception desk. Address: 1376 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 69944, Phone: 1376 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 69944. Contact: Ann Ermey. OE/OA/193-844-9130; Contact: Ann Ermey.
- PC CD ROM
- Nintendo 64
Part-time Sales Positions Now available for all hours. No athletic background needed; Enthusiasm and willingness to learn required.
Come Join Our Team!
Apply at store
1028 Massachusetts St.
- Super Nin
- Game Boy
370 - Want to Buv
1
7 East Seventh 331-0080 www.game-guy.com
$
$$$$$
Nice and large 1000kg f armiture with back yard, lower level, walk to campus less than a mile, two bedrooms with kitchen and newly furnished room, with last long, call 785 940-2432, available August 1st.
3 BR Apt., Near KU, Utilities paid $690 lease deposit No Pets 8431 Avail now.
1 & 2 BRs avail, for summer & fall. Nice, quiet & W. Lawrence location. Private patio/balcony. On KU bus route. Easy I-7 access. Laundry facility & swimming pool, on site. CA, CH, DW. Starring at $70-305. Drop in any time 6-Mon-Feb. Call Hall Restoration Ages 483-601
UNI Computers 841-4611
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward for your good used computer.
WANTED :
BEST PRICE
Nice, clean, quiet 2 b. r. apt., appliances, c/a, bus.
r. pool and more. Low utils $360.90. No smoking/
pets. 841-6868
George Waters Mnmt
841-5533
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
TOWER HOUSE
We are paying up to $1,000
Available August, 1128 Ohio, spacious 2 bedroom apt. between campus and downtown. Close to GSP & Corbin. No Pets. $500-utilities. 841-1297
405 - Apartments for Rent
PenB5
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
2940 Heatherwood Dr. Open 1 pm - 6pm Mon.-Fri.
843-4754
Spacious two bedroom apartment. Two bedroom
$60 per month. $63 West 25th Street. Call 843-4447.
OREAD NEIGHBORHOOD
Several good 2 BR apts, in 1300 Ohio block. W/D
hookups. Available Aug $450.
George Waters Mnmt.
bdrm avail. July 15, 1000 Block Ohio. W/D
ncluded. $400. 799.5446
11200 6-7 BR, Avail Aug 1, deposit, lease, no pets.
18300 6-7 BR, Avail Aug 1, deposit, lease, no pets.
Real nice i & 2 bbm aps, close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off street parking. Abu no. 35. 600 sq ft.
400s Real Estate
Cedarwood Apartments
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
* Studios
* Duplexes (4 Bedroom)
* Air Conditioning
- Close to shopping & restaurants
• 1 block from KU Bus route
• REASONABLE PRICES!
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
2Pools/2LaundryRooms
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
1 & 2 Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
Now leasing for the summer and fall semesters. Very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments available.
Call Karin Now!
843-1116
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
3 Hot Tubs
25 Low Deposits
25 Small Pets Welcome
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established
(25) Volleyball Court
(26) On KU Bus Port
$\textcircled{25}$ SLOW/DOWNSIDE
25 On KU Bus Route
26 Some WAY ROUTE
25 SomeW/DHookups
Call or stop by today!
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Tropical Island
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer and Fall
Leasing for Summer and Fall
1 Bedroom $370
2 Bedroom $435
3 Bedroom $630
4 Bedroom $760
-Swimming Pool
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
Call 843-0011 or 550-0011
Office Hours
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
Cedarwood Apartments
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
* Swimming pool
* On site Laundry facilities
* Air Conditioning
* Close to shopping & restaurants
* On KU Bus route
* REASONABLE PRICES!
Call Karin Now!
843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
LCA Apartments, Inc.
- Spacious houses/apts.
* 2, 3, 4 BPs.
- Furnished and unfurnished
- Located block from campus
- On KU bus route
- Pets welcome (at selected locations)
- AC, DW, disposal, W/D microwave
Aspen West
- Roommate needed for 3&4 bdrm apts.
Now Leasing for Fall!
Call 749-3794
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Water Paid
- Cable Paid
- Laundry on Site
- No Pets
- Reasonable rates
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS 66049 865-2500
405 - Apartments for Rent
3 & 4 BRS. avail. for summer & fill. Nice. quiet w. Clean W. Lawrence location. Walk in closet, 2 baths, on KUB route, easy access to 70. Launch facility & swimming pool on site. Ca, CH,DW. Starting at $830-$760. Drop in anytime 9-6 Mon-Fri. Call Holiday Apartments. #85-001 to view.
Excellent location. 1010 Tenn.店/kU, 2 BR
Apt. in 4-plex c. no pets. $410. Aug. 1.84-4.823
SHANNON PLAZA
SHRUVEN LABORATORY
Quick location in the apt. water pfd
$495 all apps. & W/B, built in booklets.
BR btroomhouse for Aug. move in - loft style, 2 full baths, 1 w/jacuzzi jupe & sklyf LP.
Call 841-7726
2100 Heatherwood #A-2
Hurry…Don't miss this!
First Management
incorporated
Property Management • Construction Management
M
HIGHPOINTE
2001 W, 6th
LUXURY 1 & 2 BR's
• Washer & Dryer
• Club House & Gym
• Basketball Court
• Pool & Hot Tub
Other Locations:
1137 Tennessee
Oread Apartments, 12th & Oread
Chamberlin Court, 1740 Ohio
Abbott's Corner, 18th & Ohio
Haworth Place, 29rd & Haworth
Bradford Square, 100 Colorado
Gateway Apartments, 821 Gateway Court
1,2 & 3 Bedroom
Open 7 days a week
841-8468
NOW LEASING FOR
KVM
NOW LEASING FOR
SUMMER & FALL '98
STUDIOS; 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS;
EYES & HOMES
GREAT LOCATION!
- Jimestown Apartments
- Alabama Place Apartments
- Pin Oak Townhomes
- Red Oak Apartments
- Fountain Homes
- Eddingham Place Apartments
- West Meadows Condos
- 24 hr Maintenance
- Pets O.K. in Some Locations
Call 841-6080 or stop by
808 W.24th St
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
FORESTED PRICE
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Swimming Pool
- Exercise Weight Room
- Laundry Room
Fireplace
Energy Efficient
- On Site Management
- Daily 3:00-5:00
Professionally Managed By
808 W.24th
KVM
841-6080
841-5444
---
- 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes
- Available now and a few
- Studios, 1, 2, 3, bedroom apt.
- for August
- Basic cable paid
- Water paid in apt.
- Walking distance to campus
RESERVE YOUR NEW
HOME TODAY!
Monday-Friday 8-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Meadowbrook
405 - Apartments for Rent
BARNES STATE PARK
atens, at aper complex near h. a town, D/W,
microwave, C/A, W/D hookups. "Stacked on"
literary laundry room. Not carpets available.
No pets, please. $390. Available. George Waters Mgmt.
Immediate Availability
1 & 2 BR apts;
3 BR townhouses,
$365 & up.
GRAYSTONE
2512 W.6th St. 749-1102
1
Extended hours
10-4 Mon.-Fri.
9-4 Sat.
2512 W.6th St.749-1102
WALK TO CAMPUS
M
mastercraft
management
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon- Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am 4pm
Sun 11am 4pm
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1-bedroom $345
2-bedroom $420
NEWER!
ABERDEEN
TOWNHOMES
2 & 3 bedroom
Starting at $695
NEW!
SUMMERTREE WEST TOWNHOMES
2-bedroom/2-level
Starting at $550
NEWER!
OPEN HOUSE
OPEN HOUSE
M-F 1-5
Sat 10-4
Sun. 1-4
2300 Wakarusa Dr. SE Corner of Clinton Pkwy and Wakarusa Dr.
749-1288
410 - Condos For Rent
אלה שערות
415 - Homes For Rent
---
Real nice spacious 5 brm house close to KU.
Hardwood floors, lots of windows. Absolutely NO
pets. 749-2919
430 - Roommate Wanted
One female roommate wanted. Garage parking available, washer/dryer, own bathroom. Available Aug. 1. Call 843-4121.
Roommate needed to support 2 bdrm apt. Close to campus. On bus route. Laundry facilities in building. Avail. immediately. $195/ms. & 1/2 uts. Call 313-2837 for more info, or to view apt.
Roommate - Grad and Undergrad gals seek
friendly, consider, N/5 roomie for 3 +bdrm.
house. Avail. Aug. 1. Must like pets. $240 +1/uLutiles.
832-9587
Section A·Page 12
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 1, 1998
---
- NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
* NATURAL BODY CARE 820-822 MASS 841-0100*
Special!
Extra study room or guest room!
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
3 bedroom plus - $730
Sundance
7th & Florida
841-5255
3 bedroom plus - $690
Academic Computing Services gives you the skills to confidently navigate the information superhighway. All of our internet training is FREE and doesn't require registration. Classes are open to everyone. Just show up at the Computer Center or the Builg Hall Computer Lab at classtime.
FREE INTERNET TRAINING Academic Computing Services Week of July 6-10
HTML forms & CGI scripts—Create HTML forms for gathering information from visitors to your Web site. Then create a CGI script to save the data and reply to the user. Prequisites: HTML Advanced and UNIX: Introduction or equivalent skills. You should also be familiar with FTP.
Wed. July 8, 6 - 9 p.m./Budio Hall PC Lab
All classes are held in the Computer Center located across from the Dole Center at Sunsyde and Illinois. Class schedule Pick up a Driver's Ed at the Computer Center or go to:
Escaped bank robber Jack Foley (George Clooney) finds himself attracted to Karen Sisco (Jennifer Lopez), the federal marshal trying to capture him. Contributed Photo.
WD
Wilderness Discovery Camping Equipment Rental
Actors' performances make Out of Sight worth seeing
Camping Equipment Rental
Item 1st Day Additional Day
4 person tent $ 10.00 $ 5.50
2 person tent $ 7.00 $ 3.50
Coleman Cook Kit $ 3.50 $ 2.50
Sleeping Bag $ 4.00 $ 3.50
And Much More!
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
* Jaybowl * Kansas Union * Level 1 *
* University of Kansas * 785-864-3545 *
MOVIE REVIEW
Nobody should mistake Elmore Leonard's crime novels for literary masterpieces. Steven Soderbergh's Out of Sight is the first adaptation of a Leonard yarn to understand that.
Much more than Get Shorty or Jackie Brown, Out of Sight matches the voyeuristic thrill that accompanies Leonard's prose: tight dialogue, smart crooks and a plot that runs in a dozen directions simultaneously.
Screenwriter Scott Frank has studied his source material well. Soderbergh, who directed the hit sex, lies and videotape, wisely understands that he is not directing Chekhov. Viewers should not search the movie for an insightful social message or any kind of subtext. This is hard-hitting, neo-noir, loaded with on-target performances by Jennifer Lopez, Ving Rhames and Kansas City actor Don Cheadle.
Most impressively, George Clooney easily shows that he should have a decent career after ER. Burying any bad Batman & Robin memories, he eases into the polyester suits of lifelong crook Jack Foley with a confidence recalling Cary Grant or
By Jeremy M. Doherty Kansan movie critic
Buddy Bragg (Ving Rhames) stands by his friend Jack Foley (George Clooneyduring the movie Out of Sight. Bragg helped Foley escape from prison. Contributed Photo
But Foley has his eye on a new prize. When he was in prison, he heard about a $5 million cache of diamonds that is stashed in a Detroit businessman's home.
him out of jail. Even the way he ignites his cigarette lighter with a flick of his finger sets him apart from other hoods.
Steve McQueen.
Foley definitely has style. He robs banks with winks and smiles instead of bullets. He seduces Karen Sisco (Lopez), the federal marshal who tails Foley after his buddy (Rhames) busts
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For Foley, who has lived a life in and out of prisons, the proposition is too good to ignore. But he has to contend with Snoopy Miller (Cheadle), a hot-tempered boxer-turned-thief who also is after the loot.
Acting buffs should appreciate the ensemble work found in Out of Sight. Clooney embodies charisma, but he provides Foley with enough quirks and nervous ticks to keep him engaging. Lopez's Sisco comes across as a tough, street-wise woman who finds her edges softened by the
Running time: 2 hours
Rated R for language and violence
OUT OF SIGHT
Hollywood Theaters Southwind 12:
3433 Iowa St.
Kansan Rating: *** out of *****
Times: 1:10,4:20,7.9:40
slippery Foley
The performances and the complex structure are kept in line by Soderbergh. Aided by jerky camera work and 70s-inspired music, the director fashions a subtle melodrama that is more concerned with people than special effects.
PARKS
In this summer of empty thrills, Out of Sight provides some much needed nourishment.
Former KU tackle hits Hollywood
Football standout lands small role in new action film
By Sarah Skulskie Special to the Kansan
In the new action movie Out of Sight, Loneker plays White Boy Bob, a bodyguard/thug who roughs people up so his gang can score some wealth.
Former KU offensive tackle Keith Loneker spent four years at the University of Kansas and four in the NFL roughing people up so his team could score some points.
At 6-foot-31/2 inches tall and 330 pounds, Loneker was a force on the playing field, and in the movie he plays an intimidating bad guy. He joins Maurice (Don Cheadle) and Kenneth (Isaiah Washington) racing to steal some diamonds from rich criminal Richard Ripley (Albert Brooks) before Jack Foley (George Clooney) and his best friend Buddy (Ving Rhames) can beat them to it; all the while with Karen (Jennifer Lopez), a federal marshal, too close for comfort.
Lonerek makes his debut in the film, starring George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez, hoping it is just the beginning of a career in tinsel town. He is fulfilling both his childhood dreams: playing professional football and going to Hollywood.
Loneker enters the movie in the second half — an immense, thick-necked, bad guy with a shaven
head and goatee whose role was to be part of a gang of three who, Loneker said, would do anything — rape, rob, pillage, whatever — to make money.
His part — several scenes and about 15 lines — took about two months to shoot on location in Los Angeles and Detroit. Before shooting began, Loneker said he was nervous and excited — until he looked at child actors. If they could do it, he said he could do it.
When he got to California, he met the guys he would be working with, and he knew it could be done. Clooney told him that a movie set was not usually so easy-going but, Loneker said, everyone had a blast.
A
"The producers were cool, the director was cool and I never压 pressure," he said.
During the filming, Loneker visited with his family — his wife Kelly, daughter Kaylee and son Keith Jr. — as much as possible. Kelly Loneker supports her husband's choices.
Laneker: Former Jayhawk debuts in Out of Sight.
"It's wonderful that he's doing something he really enjoys," she said. "He's having fun. And if it turns into more than this one part for him, that's even better."
Loneker is accustomed to traveling for his job, but he has returned
"It's wonderful that he's doing something he really enjoys. He's having fun.And if it turns into more than this one part for him, that's even better."
Amy Heyliger, a longtime friend of Loneker, said that no matter what his future on the big screen may be, he would want to stay in Lawrence forever.
regularly to Lawrence. He has moved around for the last five years, joining the Los Angeles and then St. Louis Rams in 1992 for three years and then the Atlanta Falcons for one year.
with a little help from some friends, Loneker shot some video footage in his living room and sent
Kelly Loneker Wife of Keith Loneker
"He is a down-home guy who knows where his roots are," she said.
His last year of professional ball was in 1996 with the Atlanta Falcons. The day he was cut, he received a surprising phone call from Jim Price of Industry Entertainment. Price was a friend and former Rams' teammate. Price thought Loneker would be perfect for a part in an upcoming film and requested a video portrait.
Lonerek came to the University in 1989 from New Jersey on a football scholarship, making All-Conference his last three years. He left to play professional football, but he knew he would come back to Lawrence when life settled down.
it in. The day the video arrived in Los Angeles, he received another call. He got the part.
"At first I though it was a friend pulling a prank," Loneker said. "It was shocking."
As surprising as getting the part was, Loneker settled into acting with ease. His only experience had been an improvisation class at the University.
After accomplishing his goals in football and beginning a prospective acting career, Loneker is now trying his hand as a screenwriter. He combined his story idea with the talent of KU Alumni Association writer Chris Lazzarino to develop a screenplay about the adventures of two Kansas boys. Loneker said that they have begun the process of getting the screenplay accepted.
Friday, he attended the Lawrence premiere — a bit different than Hollywood — but he had a posse of friends along to cheer his big screen image.
Loneker and his wife flew to California last week to attend the Hollywood premiere of his film and enjoyed a bit of celebrity life as guests at Clooney's private pre-premiere party.
CONCERT CALENDAR
The Bottleneck: 737 New Hampshire St. 841-LIVE
7/1: Big Rude Jake
7/2: Baby Jason and the Spanksters
7/3: Warped Tour-Battle of the Bands
7/4: Warped Tour-Battle of the Bands
Replay Lunge: 946 Massachusetts St. 749-7676
7/3: The Mercury Birds
7/7: The Bubble Boys/Bthe Big Fella
7/3: Jeffrey Lee and the Pale Moon Kings
Jazzhous: 926 1/2 Massachusetts St. 749-3320
7/2: The Jennings
The Granada: 1020 Massachusetts St. 841-LIVE
7/2: Retro Dance Party
7/3: Revolution until 4 a.m.
Use Kansan Classified Advertising for the best coverage of the campus
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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PO BOX 3585
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kansan
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Wednesday
July 8, 1998
Section:
A
Warm tomorrow with partly sunny skies.
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A
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Vol.108·No.156
Sports today
The Women's basketball team announced the verbal agreement of Kristen May, one of the top high school point guards in the nation.
SEE PAGE 2B
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THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Residents safe after potential hostage situation
(USPS 650-640)
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence police responded to a potential hostage situation in West Lawrence late last night.
Sgt. Mark Warren of the Lawrence police department said that at 10:08 p.m., police received a call that one or two armed subjects had entered a house at 804 Murrow Ct. The residents of the house, both males, said that they saw two male suspects enter their house with a gun and the residents sought safety in a separate
room of the house behind a locked door, Warren said.
Sgk. Kirt Fultz said that the suspects were described as two white males, one wearing jeans, the other wearing denim shorts and army boots. Both are considered to be in their early 20s, and one of the suspects was believed to be armed with a pistol.
Fultz said that the residents of the house were suspected to be in their early 20s but could not confirm whether they were University of Kansas students.
mately 10:09 p.m. to find the back door of the home open, Warren said. They found no signs of forced entry and no signs of intruders.
Police inspected the neighborhood, found no suspects, and shortly thereafter told the neighbors that the scene was secure.
Cheryl Wonnell, 805 Murrow Ct., lives directly across the street from the scene of the incident.
She said that at approximately 10:45 p.m., she was escorting a friend from her house and was interrupted by police.
"Police came running through my yard and said, 'get back in the house.' There were police cars everywhere," she said. "It was very, very scary."
After being interviewed at the scene, the residents of the house were taken from the scene by police to the Law Enforcement Center for further questioning, Warren said.
By 11:40 p.m., police had secured the scene, he said.
"Police came running through my yard and said, 'get back in the house.' There were police cars everywhere. It was very, very scary."
Cheryl Wonnell Neighbor of the victims
Splashdance!
COLUMBIA PARKS
Maggie Heck, Lawrence junior, and Ryan Stein, Smithville, Mo., senior, play in the Chi Omega fountain with their dog, Indy. The muggy weather yesterday had people seeking cooler temperatures. Photo by Lizz Weber / KANSAN
Students may find shelter scarce during tornadoes
By Michael Martin
Kansan staff writer
In the midst of tornado season, many students living in apartment buildings or older houses have few options for immediate shelter — a situation city officials say there are no plans to change.
Students who do not live in groundfloor apartments or houses with basements often are forced to look elsewhere for shelter when tornado sirens sound.
John Peckham, Lyons senior, lives on the top floor of a three-story apartment building at 10th and Mississippi streets. The building has no basement or shelter area, he said. During a recent tornado warning, Peckham left his apartment and drove to a friend's house to take cover in its basement.
He said that the prospect of the next tornado warning — when he might not have time to drive to shelter — makes him nervous. He said that adding tornado shelters or distributing safety instructions would be a good idea.
"I've lived in Kansas all my life, but I'm sure there are a lot of people from back East who don't get worried." Peckham said. "There should be a shelter or instructions on how to get where."
Many of Lawrence's largest property management companies have little to say about the issue.
"The owners run the buildings. That's something they'd have to pay for," said the representative, who refused to give his name after being interviewed. "They try to spread out costs to other things."
A representative of A & S Rental Solutions, a property-management company, said that A & S did not distribute tornado safety instructions to residents and that their buildings lacked specific shelter areas because they were constructed without them.
Gene Shaughnessy, chief building inspector for the City of Lawrence, said that the city had no statutes, either current or pending, that would require apartment landlords to provide shelter areas or give safety instructions to residents.
However, the city requires trailer park operators either to provide shelters or
First Management, Mastercraft Corp., Meadowbrook Apartments and Colony Woods Apartments did not return phone calls. Property Management Services declined to comment.
Tornado safety tips:
- Listen to local radio or watch television for tornado warnings and instructions.
- If you hear a tornado warning or a storm threatens, seek shelter immediately.
- If you are in a building, go to a designated shelter, a basement, or an interior room, such as a bathroom or closet.
- If you are in a mobile home, leave it for a more substantial structure.
- if you are in an automobile, abandon your vehicle and seek shelter in a ditch or depression.
- Protect your head and body from debns.
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration: http://www.noa.gov
M. D. Bradshaw/KANSAN
to post the location of the nearest shelter, a compromise that resulted from limited shelter space. Shaughnessy said
"They realized there was no way they were going to get 500 people in a space made for 75," he said.
Mobile homes are held to the higher standard because they are less structurally stable than apartment buildings and less likely to have basements or lower levels, Shaughnessy said.
However, he said the number of apartment buildings with basements or lower levels was unclear.
City Manager Mike Wildgen said that the city did not have plans to add public shelters but that certain city buildings were available for that purpose.
"We've never constructed tornado shelters every other block," he said. "I don't anticipate that happening."
The Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St., and the East Lawrence Center, 1245 E. 15th St., have basements that can be used during building hours. Fire stations and the Law Enforcement Center, 111 E. 11th St., are open 24 hours a day, Wildgain said.
"Other than that, it's not any different than if you were in the countryside," he said. "You go to the lowest areas, you get to the drainage areas."
Many apartment dwellers have access to windowless, lower-level laundry rooms, Wildgen said.
"You do what you can to stay out of harm's way," Wildgen said. "There's no absolute way to protect yourself, even in areas that are tornado shelters."
Universities and city to fight underage alcohol abuse
Lawrence mayor universities intend to improve safety
By Duane Wagler
Kansan staff writer
Leaders from the two Lawrence universities and the city are working together to combat alcohol abuse among young people
Kennedy held a news conference last week to announce the joint effort.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway, Haskell Indian Nations University President Robert Martin and Lawrence Mayor Marty
Hemenway said that the task force would pool the resources of the city and its universities to gather data about alcohol use such as incidences of driving under the influence.
"We do have national statistics about alcohol use," Hemenway said, "Do we have local statistics? Yes, we have some. Do we have enough? Probably not."
by planting undercover police in liquor stores. He said that a similar program could be installed in bars to discourage underage drinking.
Hemenway said that preventing alcohol consumption by minors would be pricier.
"We want this to be a safe and livable and drivev community for everyone in Lawrence," he said.
"We want this task force to particularly pay attention to the incidence of underage drinking," he said.
Kennedy said that the city had battled underage drinking and the use of fake IDs
Hemenway said that no specific incident prompted the formation of the task force.
"I've been a chancellor for nine years—six years at Kentucky, three years at Kansas," he said. "Every year that I've been a chancellor at a university there have been various incidents where students have been harmed or have been placed at risk because of alcohol use."
Hemenway said it was important for the
community to explore options to prevent alcohol-related incidents.
"I'm not sure that you can totally eliminate all those occasions, but I think you have an obligation to do what you can to try to minimize the negative effects," he said.
The addition of high school students to the task force was important. Hemanway said.
The task force members will include representatives from the universities and business and community leaders as well as university and high school students.
Provost David Shulenburger, chairman of the task force, that said no date had been
"We have a lot of students who come to our institutions already fairly experienced drinkers from high school," he said.
Preyost David Shulenburger
Dr Shulenburger
Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs David
Ambler
TASK FORCE MEMBERS
Director of KU Office of Public Safety Ralph Oliver
Associate General Counsel Karen Dutcher Student Body President Kevin Yoder One more undetermined student
set for the first meeting. He said that the meetings would be open to the public.
Hemenay said that the task force would be asked to present specific recommendations by Dec. 15.
2A
The Inside Front
Wednesday July 8,1998
News
from campus and Lawrence
LAWRENCE
In the June 24 issue of The University Daily Kansan, an article about the hospital public authority board referred to its governance of the University of Kansas Medical Center. The board will govern the hospital at the Med Center and not the entire Med Center.
CAMPUS
Chancellor Robert Hemenway also announced that the first meeting of the board will be July 14.
Geological Survey head plans to resign in 1999
Lee Gerhard, state geologist and director of the Kansas Geological Survey, has announced that he will resign.
CLARIFICATIONS
According to a news release, Gerhard announced his resignation would be effective June 30,1999. He has been the director of the Geological Survey at the University of Kansas since 1987.
During Gerhard's time at the Survey he was involved in grant and funding activity. Funded projects included the study of water production from the Dakota aquifer, the monitoring and evaluating of water quality and resources in western Kansas, and the study of the Hugoton Natural Gas area.
Gerhard said that it was time for him to step aside as director.
"Fundamentally, it's a retirement," he said. "We don't call it a retirement, because I plan to stay and do research. After 12 years of accomplishing my agenda, I'm a believer in turning these jobs over to younger and newer folks."
Before working at the Survey, Gerhard was Getty Professor of Geological Engineering at the Colorado School of Mines He also was the state geologist and director of the North Dakota Geological Survey and head of the University of North Dakota geology department from 1977 to 1981.
A New York native, Gerhard earned his bachelor's degree in geology from Syracuse University and his master's and doctoral degrees from the University of Kansas.
—Duane Wagler
Alumni couple to donate $10,000 for scholarships
A Topea couple has committed
$10,000 to the School of Social Welfare
for minority student scholarships.
For minority students on campus
William and Beverly Baird Harper will add the gift to the minority scholarship fund the Harpers created in 1996. The Harpers also will continue to donate annually to the William E. and Beverly B. Harper Scholarship in Social Welfare with funds matched by Southwestern Bell, William Harper's former employer.
Dean Ann Weick announced the commitment yesterday in a news release.
William Harper is the clinical director at Shawnee Regional Prevention Center, a nonprofit counseling program. He pursued two different careers and earned two degrees from the University of Kansas.
After earning a bachelor's degree in English in 1960, Harper began working for Southwestern Bell. He took an early retirement as division manager 30 years later and returned to the University, earning a master's degree in social work in 1993.
The Harpers have three children, all of whom attended the University.
Beverly Baird Harper earned bachelor's degrees in theatre and drama and radio/TV/film in 1960. After graduating, she had her own children's television program on a public television station in St. Louis.
—Duane Wagler
LAWRENCE University student reports rape by unknown man
A KU student reported being raped early Saturday morning in the 1100 block of Mississippi Street, Lawrence police said yesterday.
According to Officer Matt Sarna:
The student was in her apartment waiting for a friend to arrive. At 12:50 a.m., she heard a knock at the door.
She opened the door a bit, and an unknown man forced his way inside.
allegedly raped her and left at 1 a.m.
through the apartment's front door.
The man hit the woman in the face as she attempted to escape. Then he
The woman first called a friend and notiied police at 3:48 a.m.
The suspect was described as a 6-foot white male, 20-25 years old with blond hair, a medium build and no facial hair. He was wearing a blue cap, jeans and a white t-shirt. He has not been identified.
"We're still investigating the incident, Sarna said. "We interviewed the neighbors, but those reports are not back yet."
The woman was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St., later that morning, Sarna said.
Cox receives sentence in Leary kidnapping case
David Cox, who was convicted June 2 of kidnapping Lawrence residents Ralph and Leila Leary, was sentenced to almost 19 years in prison yesterday.
Judge Robert Fairchild of the Douglas County District Court sentenced Cox to 194 months for kidnapping and 32 months for attempted aggravated robbery.
"I'm very satisfied with the verdict," Douglas County District Attorney Christine Tonkovich said.
Cox's partner, David Johnson, was sentenced June 9 to more than 23 years in prison for holding Ralph Leary hostage for 45 hours between Jan. 22 and 24. Cox surrendered to authorities and released Leila Leary Jan. 22 after holding her hostage for 12 hours.
Before Judge Fairchild handed down his decision, Leila Leary spoke to Cox in front of the court.
"David, you have to love and respect yourself," Leary said. "You have to do what's good and wholesome. Even in jail."
Leary also encouraged Cox to study the Bible and pray.
Leary concluded by thanking the Douglas County judicial system and all the law enforcement agencies that assisted during the hostage situation.
"Pray in your own way for those you've hurt," she said. "Pray for your family and yourself. Begin to learn about God and love."
Cox then faced the Learys and gave a brief apology. He became emotional, turned away and did not look at the Learys again.
—Ronnie Wachter
"I'm happy for the victims, that this case is finally over and now they can go on with putting their lives back in order," Tonkovich said.
Shoplifters score $2,000 in goods, police allege
Lawrence police arrested three persons on a charge of shoplifting Friday afternoon after they apparently stole merchandise valued at more than $2,000 from three area stores, Sgt. George Wheeler said.
The alleged shoplifters, two Topeka women and a Lawrence man, were arrested at 2 p.m. in the parking lot of J.C. Penney, 1801 W. 23rd St., after a security guard called police, Wheeler said.
The suspects had apparently taken $440.96 worth of fall clothing from the store, he said.
"We contacted the suspects, and determined these were the people the security guard observed," Wheeler said. "We found several other items from other stores."
Wheeler said that police found electronics, including several videocassette recorders and telephones valued at $992.95, apparently taken from Kmart, 3106 Iowa St. He said police also found VCRs and audio equipment valued at $679.86 apparently taken from Wal-Mart, 3300 Iowa St.
Wheeler said he did not know how the suspects would have been able to take such large items without being detected by security guards at the other two stores.
Ronnie Wachter
ON THE RECORD
A student's bike was stolen between 9:45 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. July one near Robinson Center, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $200.
A CD-ROM drive and two, eight-megabyte RAM chips were stolen from a computer between June 23 and June 29 at the Continuing Education Building, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $280
A KU landscaping staff member's truck was vandalized between 6:15 a.m. and 3:15 p.m. July 2 at the motor pool parking lot, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The damage was estimated at $250.
The left front window of a KU student's car was smashed and an AM/FM/CD stereo was stolen June 22 or June 23 in the 900 block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police said. The loss was valued at $600.
A KU employee was criminally threatened at 2:51 a.m. Saturday in the 1400 block of West 22nd Terrace, Lawrence police said.
A KU employee's license plate was stolen between midnight and 6 a.m. July 1 in the 1600 block of Barker Street, Lawrenceville. On July 1, the officer returned $7.
The bed and a tire of a KU student's truck were damaged between 12:20 a.m. Thursday and midnight Friday in the 800 block of Michigan Street, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $350.
The front passenger window of a KU student's car was damaged between 10:30 p.m. June 30 and 10:30 a.m. July 1 in the 1200 block of Oread Avenue, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $200.
A KU student's brown leather wallet, $15 in cash and several credit cards were stolen between 1 a.m. and 1:30 a.m. Friday in the 600 block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $35
police said. The items were valued at $35.
A KU student's license plate was stolen between 5 p.m. July 1 and 8:45 a.m. Thursday in the 1500 block of Third Street, Lawrence police said. The plate was valued at $10.
A KU student's 26-inch TV and VCR were stolen between 8 a.m. May 27 and 4:30 p.m. June 23 in the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $600.
A KU Medical Center employee's bicycle was stolen between 8 a.m. Thursday and 1 p.m. Friday in the 400 block of Forrest Avenue, Lawrence police said. The bicycle was valued at $200.
A KU employee's handicap parking tag was stolen between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. July 1, Lawrence police said. The tag was valued at $10.
A KU law school employee's personalized license plate was stolen between noon June 30 and 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Lawrence police said. The plate was valued at $5.
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.
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Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and home-town if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
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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 Gwen Olson (goson@kansan.com) or Ann Premer (apremer@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (editor@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
What Douglas County Bank Can Do For You:
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865-1069
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Your Hometown Bank
Wednesday, July 8, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
City offers bits of world
Far-flung places are brought near
By Beth Janes Kansan staff writer
July 4 has come and gone like a fizzled firecracker, and it's to spice up the summer and experience Lawrence's international flavor.
Several stores and restaurants in town will leave you feeling as if you have traveled the world without leaving Lawrence.
Jerusalem Cafe, 1021 Massachusetts St., has offered Lawrence residents a taste of the Middle East for more than two years. Traditional Middle Eastern music plays in the background while customers eat hummus, kabobs or one of several vegetarian selections.
Sami Azzeh, restaurant manager, said that the cafe had won numerous awards for its food from the Kansas City Star and Pitch Weekly. He said that in the fall belly dancers would entertain diners every Wednesday night.
Africa Adorned, 5 E. Seventh St., imports many items from faraway places. The small store smells of incense and is packed with jewelry and knickknacks.
"We have great stuff. I'll get comments from people who say the store has the best selection and lowest prices anywhere," said Elizabeth Kurata, store owner. "People always say they can't find any place like it."
Kurata started her business in 1995 when she returned to Lawrence, her hometown, after living in East Africa for 10 years. During its first year, the store sold only items imported from Africa. Later, Kurata began selling jewelry and other imports from other international locations.
"People just weren't interested in African merchandise," she said. "But business now, after 13 years, just keeps getting better and better."
While Africa and Europe are many miles apart, it is only a short walk from Africa Adorned to Brits, 732 Massachusetts St. Brits sells British goods and rents British videos.
"We sell regular food that you would find in Britain," said Sally Helm, Brits co-owner. "Chips, sausage, cheeses — things you would find if you were to go grocery shopping there."
Darren Ward and Matt Barr, both from England, are in the United States this summer coaching soccer. They were almost giddy walking through the store pointing out familiar items.
"We drove past last night and thought we'd have a hook in." Ward said. "They've got things in here we'd have at home."
Helm and Susie Pryor, co-owner considered different retail concepts before deciding to open Brits.
"We both have visited Britain many times and loved it," she said. "We talked to people and realized others had the same interest."
Helm and Pryor are opening Au Marche in August at 19 W. 9th St.
Unlike Brits, Au Marche will sell primarily gourmet European food and British cheeses.
Helm said she thought Lawrence was a great place for multicultural stores and restaurants.
AFF
Darren Ward, a soccer coach visiting Lawrence from London, finds familiar items while shopping at Brits, 732 Massachusetts 5t. Photo by Bex Janes / KANSAN.
"Lawrence isn't your typical Kansas town. There is such a mix of cultures and people," she said.
Chemists react well to lab work
By Julie Sachs Kansan staff writer
Thirteen chemistry students from across the country are making the University of Kansas their home for the summer.
The students are participants in the Research Experience for Undergraduates program, which is funded by the National Science Foundation.
For 10 weeks, students learn how to integrate themselves into the culture of a lab and how to solve problems as a team, said Barbara Schowen, professor of chemistry.
"It's been a great experience so far. I'm learning a lot of research techniques," said Aaron Wrobski, Oglesby, Ill., junior from Luther College.
An oral report detailing the progress, problems and results of each group is presented halfway
through the summer. During the final week of the program, the students display posters illustrating the conclusions of their research, Schowen said.
In addition to lab experience, students receive grants from the program that pay for expenses.
"Generally the grant pays $2,800 in cash for the summer." Schowen said. "This time the students also get room and board."
Participants are living in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall.
The National Science Foundation also pays for the participants to enroll in one credit hour each, and the Foundation pays up to $300 for travel expenses, Schowen said.
Universities throughout the country serve as host sites for the program. The University has been a host site for 10 years.
Students who wish to participate in the program can apply at several
host sites.
The host schools have the final say in student acceptance. Many students who applied to study at the University during the summer were turned away.
"We got about 100 applicants from this program, and we chose 13," Schowen said.
Those who were accepted by the University each said they had a different reason for coming here.
Wrobleski said that coming to the University connected him to his own college.
"The guy I'm working with, Paul Hanson, is a Luther grad," he said. But Laura Hamilton, Liberty, Mo., junior from William Jewell College said that coming to the University had been a good experience for a different reason.
Students who want to be considered for the program must complete an application and write a short essay stating why they should be chosen. Applicants also need to submit transcripts and two letters of recommendation, Schowen said.
"I realized I can be successful in the lab and on a big campus," Hamilton said. "I have enjoyed the independence."
The applications then go before a committee of five faculty members. This committee ranks the students in order of preference.
"We are looking for students with a B average in science courses," Schowen said. "We like them to have the equivalent of three years of chemistry behind them."
The National Science Foundation also wants host schools to include students from smaller schools and other various groups, Schowen said.
"We hope it's a nice mix of men and women," Schowen said. "We try to get the under-represented as well."
Professor takes activist approach to Amazon natives
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
To western society, Bartholomew Dean, with his stylist attire and Harvard education, is a paragon of culture and success.
But to the Urarina (oo-ra-wreena) peoples of the Peruvian Amazon he's known as the "old, fat man" or "peeled-potato guy." And that is fine with Dean.
"When you see yourself from other people's eyes, it often alleviates this arrogance and perspective that white European is always No.1," Dean said.
Dean, University of Kansas assistant professor of anthropology, has lived with, studied and helped the Urarina people on and off for 10 years. Wednesday, Dean and his wife Michelle McKinley, a researcher at the Museum of Anthropology, will leave for Peru for a six-month stay with the Urarina, who live in the back country areas of the Peruvian region of Loreto.
Dean is going as the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland's 1998-1999 Fellow in Urgent Anthropology. One $15,000 grant is given every year to do research on indigenous peoples who are threatened or never have been studied. Dean will spend the second half of the year in London writing and delivering a report.
In addition to the research, Dean said the focus of the trip would be to establish a foundation for a bilingual education program.
"Anthropologists, historically have studied people like this, but have not always been concerned about the long-term welfare of these people," Dean said.
Dean received this mind set, as well as his doctoral degree, from Harvard in 1995. After witnessing a Cholera outbreak among the Urarina, he became convinced that he had to get more involved.
In 1995, he and McKinley estab
Urarina range
Colombia
The nomadic Urarina inhabit the Loreto region of Peru.
Ecuador
Brazil
Peru
Pacific Ocean
AREA OF DETAIL
M.D. Bradshaw/KANSAN
lished the Amazonian Peoples Resource Initiative. The program has since offered health education, conservation and food resource programs. The Initiative is a private, non-profit organization housed in Spooner Hall.
Dean said that there are those that charge that this activist approach disrupts native cultures. Dean thinks it is a matter of balance.
Cultural Survival is a Massachusetts organization whose goal is to protect and defend the rights and cultural autonomy of indigenous people. Amy Stoll, managing editor of the Cultural Survival Quarterly, said that the merit of such interventionist programs depended on the intentions of the activists and the desires of the peoples.
"If they have expressed a need or a desire to improve the health or educational system of their community, then sure, that's good." Stoll said. "But as far as going in and telling them they need to build a school, then that's not the best approach."
Dean said he felt like the Urarina still wanted his help and that he would know his job was done when they told him to leave. But Dean said that it was not so much about helping them as it was about learning from them, particularly the value of community consciousness.
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Attention: Faculty and Staff
The deadline to turn in an application for payroll deduction for the FY '99 faculty and staff parking permits is July 15,1998.
All of this year's permits expire July 31,1998
Permit distribution for those who have already turned in their application will begin July 1.
New permits must be displayed by August 3,1998
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Section A · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 8,1998
Play depicts artist's illness
By Mariana Palva
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Rita Hayworth
"Mirror, Mirror on the wall..." The famous saying from Snow White will have a different connotation in a production this weekend.
Elizabeth Layton, the lead character in the play "Mirror/ Mirror," plays a character suffering manic depression. The play was written by Wendy MacLaughlin and directed by Judy Wright. The rehearsal was held yesterday in Murphy Hall at 7:30 p.m. Photo by Lizz Weber/KANSAN
The play "Mirror/Mirror" deals with a manic depressive artist who attempts to cure herself. It shows how Elizabeth Layton, Wellsville resident, drew on paper the emotions she saw reflected in a mirror. The play opens at 8 p.m. Friday in Murphy Hall's Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
"Mirror/Mirror" was written by Wendy MacLaughlin, Kansas City, Mo., resident. The play has won the second Great Plains Play Contest sponsored by the University Theatre and the International Play Award for Women in History.
"Mirror/Mirror" opens with Layton receiving electroshock therapy in the mid-1970s and depicts Layton's experience of fighting manic depression by using a creative process.
Judy L. Wright, development director at the University of Kansas Endowment Association, was invited by the University Theatre's annual summer program to direct the play. Wright is a professional director.
"I fell in love with the play, so I decided to accept the invitation. It is special for me because I had the opportunity to meet Elizabeth Lyton briefly through a Lawrence festival called Independence Days in 1990," Wright said.
The cast includes seven community members and actors from the KU theater department.
Wright said that playwright MacLaughlin has attended rehearsal several times
and has given important input.
"Working with the director has been very supportive," MacLaughlin said. "She wants to know what I think, different from many people who forget the play writer."
MacLaughlin said her presence in the theater was especially important in the first week when adjustments were made to the script.
MacLaughlin said that Wright did a good job helping the actors understand the creative process Leyton experienced. The director brought an art therapist to the theater, and had the actors draw their emotions by looking into a mirror, as Leyton did.
Mark Reaney, associate professor of theater and film, designed the set and costumes. He used Lavton's drawings in his sonic design.
The play will be performed Friday through Sunday and July 17 at 8 p.m. Reserved seats for the Kansas Summer Theater productions are on sale at KU box offices.
Burglars clean house at ATO fraternity
By Ronnie Wachter Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house, 1537 Tennessee St., lost furniture and other property valued at more than $17,000 when it was burglarized at an unknown time last month, Lawrence police said.
Sgt. George Wheeler said the house was broken into between June 3 and June 25 by an unknown suspect using an unknown method of entry.
He said three sofas, four leather wing chairs and several paintings and photograph composites were taken, as well as a grandfather clock valued at $4,000. The stolen property was valued at $17,250. Wheeler said.
"This is the first robbery of a fraternity or sorority this summer," Wheeler said. "More could take place later."
The burglary was discovered by Phil McKnight, professor of teaching and leadership and Alpha Tau Omega's chapter adviser. It was reported to police on June 29, Wheeler said.
McKnight said he believed the house was broken into more than once.
"I try to check the house daily, and on one of my rounds, I noticed a window frame had been pushed in," he said. "I checked and didn't find anything missing. Then a few days later, I noticed the frame pushed in again, and a sliding glass door
was open, and that was when we saw all the furniture was gone."
McKnight said that he and others involved in the fraternity were angry about the theft.
"Fraternity buildings and sorority buildings in the summer are very easy targets," he said. "We're planning on getting a very sophisticated alarm system as soon as possible. We're not going to let this happen again."
He said some damage had been done to the walls of the house's living room, where artwork had been pulled out of its settings.
"We had watercolors of the campus, a print of the house and other pictures as well," he said. "They were very beautiful prints and paintings."
McKnight said that the most expensive item in the house, the grand piano, was not taken because it was too large to be moved easily.
Wheeler said police did not have any suspects, and McKnight said he did not believe the fraternity would ever see its furniture again.
"The furniture is probably long gone from Lawrence by now," McKnight said. "It would have been very easy to do because of our secluded location, especially late at night. They probably just backed a truck up to the sliding glass door and took what they wanted."
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Wednesday, July 8, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 5
Residency-law shifts hit students where they live
By Duane Wagler Kansan staff writer
Changes in residency requirements could help some University of Kansas students.
Marla Herron, assistant registrar, said that changes in the residency law affected the requirement that resident students be Kansas residents for one year.
She said that under the old law, if a student left Kansas to live elsewhere and then returned to the state within a year, the person would lose Kansas residency
Herron said that the new law, which was passed by the Legislature this year, would allow students to retain residency if they moved back to Kansas during
that year.
The old law unfairly penalized students because most states require a student to live in the state for a year to become a resident, she said.
Herron and fellow registrars at the six Regents universities meet twice a year to discuss issues such as residency.
"We all got together and discussed it and thought that it was unfair that people could lose their residency in one day and yet couldn't achieve residency in another state for a year," she said.
Richard Morrell, registrar, agreed with the Legislature's decision.
"It was a technicality in the law
that we thought was being a little unfair — and they changed it," he said.
The second change affects dependents with parents living in different states. Herron said that the old residency law stipulated that the Kansas-resident parent had to provide a majority of financial support for the dependent to gain residency.
Under the new regulation, however, Herron said that the dependent could get residency if one parent was a Kansas resident.
She said that the new regulation acknowledged the rising divorce rate.
"These laws need to keep up-to-date with the needs of the students," Herron said.
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East 23rd Street now a potential site
By Jenny Oakson
The amendment added East 23rd Street, from Haskell Avenue to the city's western edge, to a list of
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Although Lawrence pedestrians, bikers and bus riders cannot honk horns, they definitely are getting noticed.
Last night the Lawrence City Commission amended the city's portion of the state's comprehensive transportation proposal to include one more bicycle/pedestrian path.
Kansan staff writer
"Wichita, Kansas City, Johnson
The city's amendment must be approved by the Douglas County Commission.
The City Commission also voted unanimously to ask for increased state funds for mass transit in Lawrence.
intended sites for non-motorized vehicle paths. The list already includes the South Lawrence Trafficway, U.S. Highway 59 South and K-10 as intended sites.
"We want to connect Lawrence paths to other major paths for recreation and transportation." said Michael Young, interim transportation planner.
These paths eventually could connect to paths in Johnson County and Ottawa.
"Because the commission thinks local transit is a priority, we should definitely address it for the community and the University," said Mike Wildgen, city manager.
County and Topeka each get $4,000 for their transit systems," said Allen Black, KU professor of architecture and urban design. "We'd be eligible if we had a fixed transit system."
The state transit funds, derived from gasoline taxes, are allotted to cities with defined transit needs.
Although Lawrence has a smaller population than most of the recipient cities, Black said that the Lawrence Bus Company could qualify for state funds within five years because of the growing number of riders.
FORD
Teachers study writers at seminar
Spending most of July at an English seminar may not sound like a vacation, but receiving $2,450 to do so could be well worth it.
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
The seminar is a part of the NEH's Summer Seminars and
Fifteen school teachers from across the nation arrived in Lawrence Sunday to participate in a four-week seminar titled, "American Women As Writers: Wharton and Cather." The seminar is sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities, which is providing a grant of $2,450 to each participant for travel and living expenses. The seminar is being conducted on the University of Kansas campus by Janet Sharistian, professor of English.
Institutes School Teachers program, designed to help high school teachers enhance their knowledge during summer breaks.
Linda Wedge, an English teacher at Free State High School, said she had been looking forward to learning more about Willa Cather and Edith Wharton, both of whom are included in her American Literature class curriculum. She said the program was great for teachers.
Participants will meet at the Hall Center for the Humanities building until tomorrow for intensive study and discussion of one book per week. They will study four books,
"It's very worthwhile." Wedge said. "It helps all the teachers continue and extend their interests and studies. I was glad Newt Gingrich did not get to the NEH before the grants were cut."
two by Wharton and two by Cather. Sharistanian said that the seminar would focus on the similarities concerning gender roles, historical context and literary forms in the two authors, who were essentially contemporaries, though very different people.
The 15 teachers were selected from a pool of 45 applicants and come from diverse locations such as New Jersey and Seattle, said Janet Crow, executive director for the center.
Crow said she planned to introduce the group to local activities such as the Farmer's Market and concerts in South Park.
"Many of these people come from either coast, and they have not been exposed to some of the smaller town activities like the Farmer's Market, and they really like getting that flavor, that touch of Lawrence," Crow said.
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Section A · Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 8, 1998
SUA sponsors Friday fun: free movie, concert at Union
By Darrin Peschka
Kansan staff writer
Student Union Activities will provide free entertainment on Friday.
Students will have their choice of either a free movie and popcorn or a free outdoor concert featuring a live band, said Mike Fine, SUA program coordinator.
Activities will begin at 9 p.m. at Alder-
son Auditorium in the Kansas Union,
SUA will show the blockbuster hit Men
in Black.
Originally, a 7 p.m. showing was scheduled, but it was canceled because of low turnout at the 7 p.m. showing of another SUA-sponsored movie.
"Seven p.m. may be too early for people," Fine said. "But at the 9 p.m. screening, the auditorium was packed. We think that the turnout will be good for this movie, too."
There will be free popcorn, and soda can be purchased in the concession areas.
Also starting at 9 p.m. will be an outdoor concert featuring local band Swing
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
39. The concert will be held on the terrace outside the third floor of the Union.
Matt Dunehoo, SUA live music coordinator, said that Swing 39 was a popular local band that played frequently at the Bottleneck.
The show will last about two hours. In case of inclement weather, the concert will be held inside the Union.
This is the second live concert that SUA has sponsored this summer. In June, Seattle-based Roadside Monument played after a screening of Liar, Liar.
"We had a really good turnout for that show," Dunehoo said. "We had a lot of Kansas City people who came to see the band."
SUA is tentatively planning a third live concert for the end of August, Dunehoo said.
A palm-sized metal coffin is the only burial that Susan Small Futrell's great aunt was given.
By Julie Sachs
Memories preserved in art
Kansan staff writer
Futrell, Louisville senior, created the coffin to preserve her aunt's memory. It is one of many three-dimensional metal pieces that Futrell, a metal-smithing major, is creating to remember ancestors who survived and died in the Holocaust.
Her project is titled the "Benjamin Family Holocaust Research Project."
"I want to educate the public about the Holocaust in an intimate way," Futrell said. "It's like sharing a secret."
Each of the pieces, she said, will tell the story of a different ancestor.
The tiny coffin represents her Great Aunt Anna's story.
Beneath the lid of the coffin is a framed picture of Anna. Inside the coffin rests a set of train tracks. Futrell said the tracks signify her aunt freezing to death on a train during the Holocaust. Inscribed on the bottom of the coffin is the Jewish mourner's praver.
Grant money from her undergraduate research award paid for the acquisition of information which enabled her to begin
Retrieving details about her relatives has taken Futrell to sources outside the country.
her pieces, Futrell said.
"I have used it to travel, and I have interviewed three relatives," she said. "I am trying to correspond with the president of Israel to get information."
Acquiring the information was not the hard part.
"The hard part is what to do with the information and trying to put it into a piece," Futrell said.
Research on the town where the family lived in Germany also inspired a piece in Futrell's collection, said Jon Havener, professor of design.
From the information, Futrell created a metal locket inscribed with a clock form and a map of Germany on its surface. Haventer said the meaning of the piece was that Futrell's family left in time.
1
"My mother was only 16 months old when her side of the family came over from Germany during the Holocaust." Futrell said. "It's something I have known about my whole life."
Two more pieces are planned to be completed for the grant project, she said. More pieces will be completed after the
Susan Furtell, Louisville senior, made a metal coffin in remembrance her great aunt. Futrell wants others to remember and be educated on the horrors of the holocaust. Photo by Lizz Weber/KANSAN
initial project is finished.
"I see it as a very long-term project," Futrell said. "I had already started on it before I got the grant."
After the entire project is completed, Futrell said that she would definitely want to show her work.
"We would encourage her to exhibit it," Haven said.
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9
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the university
daily kansan
wednesday ◄
7.8.98
one.b. ◄
Sports facilities undergo changes
Kansas Memorial Stadium
By Melinda Weaver Kanson staff writer
Many KU athletics establishments will be sporting new looks next season.
The biggest construction project is the $25 million renovation of Memorial Stadium, resulting in a new lower concourse.
The stairs have been replaced, and new concrete has been poured around the entire building.
"It has better lighting. It's dry," said Pat Warren, assistant director of athletics. "People who have never been there before won't be able to appreciate what has been done, but those who have will be amazed."
Memorial Stadium is not the only building receiving a face lift this summer.
Allen Field House restrooms are being updated to meet requirements in the Americans with Disabilities Act, and an elevator will be added in the building's south end. The number of women's restrooms is being tripled. A few one-room restrooms, called family restrooms, are being added for parents with small children and people who need extra privacy.
The track around the middle of the first floor is being replaced with an even-surface floor, and the exterior doors will be replaced.
The construction is expected to be completed by the end of September in time for the opening of basketball season.
Between the field house and Anschutz Sports Pavilion, a gym — complete with locker rooms, a ticket window and concession stands — is being built. The building will contain three volleyball and basketball courts.
The volleyball team, which has competed in the field house, will have its own auditorium.
"The location is very convenient for players and fans," Warren said. "Proximity is important in all we do."
Renovations also are taking place at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
The $1.5 million improvements include new restrooms, concessions and lighting.
The number of seats has been increased from 1,300 to 2,000, including 186 luxury theater-back seats in the lower center area.
The old dug outs have been torn down. Ground-level dug outs that should not collect rain and dust will replace them.
"Hoglund Ballpark will have a much better look and feel," said Darren Cook, director of facilities. "It has an old baseball feel now. There's a wrought iron fence and more room for people to come and enjoy activities before the game."
Memorial Stadium is still undergoing construction throughout the summer. The renovations include new concession stands, restrooms and doors. The construction should cause by football season. Photo by Lizbey Weber/KANSAN
Couple donates money to honor museum curators
Elissa Harris
Elissa Harris
Kansan staff writer
Money for old bones and new ideas has been given to the Natural History Museum by KU alumni Hubert H. "Hub" and Kathleen McBride Hall of Lecompton. The couple donated $45,570 to support the museum.
They provided $20,570 last August to assist the museum's acquisition of two camerasaurus dinosaur skeletons found by University researchers in Wyoming in 1997.
The museum used the money to support the researchers and to pay the owner of the property on which the skeletons were discovered.
In January 1998, the couple gave a $25,000 gift to the Kansas University Endowment Association to benefit students studying vertebrates.
Hubert Hall, a retired geologist with Exxon, is the chair of the museum's board and the son of former museum director, E.R. Hall.
The gift includes matching funds from the Exxon Education Foundation.
The funds will be offered to students who are researching fossil vertebrates and recent vertebrates, for which vertebrates of our time are identified, said Brad Kemp, assistant director for public affairs at the museum.
A dinosaur skeleton is on display at the Natural History Museum. The museum has acquired funds geared to aid students in vertebrate research. Photo by Joseph Griffin/KANSAN
The education funds were set up in honor of former
museum assistant curators Charles D. Bunker and Handel T. Martin.
The men were left in charge after the 1910 departure of L.L.Dyche, the museum's namesake.
"All of the young Kansas farm boys who wandered into the museum were taken under their wings," Hubert Hall said.
"If you'd looked at the roster of leading ornithologists or mammalogists back in the 1950s, they were probably men who were co-opted into the field by those guys."
Hall's father was one of their students. Hall said he and his wife wanted to honor Bunker and Martin's memory as well as the memory of his parents.
The grants will be offered each semester. Each fund will be available to graduate students whose grant proposals are accepted by the museum administration.
The museum administration will decide which students receive funds, but it is the role of the Endowment Association to raise money, manage funds and make them available, said John Scarffe, director of communications for the association.
Requiring students to write grant proposals is a way of preparing them for seeking funds after they graduate and go on to research and teaching positions, Kemp said.
Funds approved for Spencer to hire expansion architect
By Elissa Harris
Kansan staff writer
The Spencer Museum of Art only has room to display five percent of its 19,000 works, but its staff has taken steps to change that fact.
On June 25, the Board of Regents approved the museums request to raise private funds to hire an architect to investigate expanding the museum, said Andrea Norris, museum director. However, funding for a new addition hasn't been approved, Norris said.
The Board requires approval of private fund-raising conducted by universities, said Barb Conant, director of communications for the Regents.
After approval, the authority for the project is delegated to a university.
Expanding the museum's facilities could provide more library space, more study areas, better office space and new galleries.
Norris said the museum hopes to add 50,000 square feet to its existing 79,000 square feet. She can only estimate the cost of a possible addition at less than $20 million.
"We could have designated spaces for certain kinds of art we can't show well now." Norris said.
She envisions a gallery specifically created for the Kansas art collection and the collection of quilts.
"I think there's potential for it to be the best building in Kansas," Norris said.
A new addition to the existing building would provide an opportunity for innovative design, she said.
"We'd really like to double the space frankly," said Susan Craig, librarian at the Art and Architecture library, which is housed in the lower level of the museum building.
When the library opened in 1980, it had 40,000 volumes. It now has reached 125,000 volumes. Compact shelving has been incorporated to accommodate the volumes, but is only a temporary solution, Craig said.
"The truth is we're just going to keep growing," Craig said. Expanding the museum is something that museum staff has talked about for a long time because it seemed inevitable that it would need to happen, said Carolyn Chinn Lewis, assistant to the director.
NON-STOPPED
STATION
WITH BACKGROUND
AND WORKING
DEVELOPMENTS.
The request was submitted this summer because, Norris said, the timing just seemed right.
Options exercised to expand Robinson
Board considers plans to enlarge recreation center
By Liz Wristen
Kansan staff writer
KU students occupy Robinson exercise room. The student senate has discussed renovation plans to expand the academic building. Expansion has occurred in the last couple years but improvement is still in sight. Photo by Lizz Weber / KANSAN
Fueled by the perception that the University of Kansas has outgrown Robinson Center, a campus advisory board is considering plans to expand or rebuild the recreation facility.
Robinson Center, located at the corner of Naismith Drive and Sunnyside Avenue, has been a topic of interest for students and faculty over the past few years. Members of the recreation advisory board, which is composed of students and faculty, and Student Senate have discussed the issue at length.
The board proposed a plan in 1996 that was voted down by the student body in part because of the high costs it would create for students, said Mary Chappell, director of recreation services.
After the 1996 referendum failed, the advisory board let the issue rest while they obtained student feedback. Chappell said that a new facility would be a big issue with Student Senate this fall. The addition of more evening classes in the center might not allow students use of the facilities until later than 5:30 p.m.
"Robinson was never intended for use as a recreation center," Chappell said. "It was built for use as an academic building to accommodate classes."
"Right now, more classes are scheduled to meet at Robinson, and some of these classes are running later in the evening," said Kevin Yoder, student body president. "We are looking at how we can best fit student needs with the current facilities."
The advisory board has considered several options which would create more recreational opportunities for students.
The current building may be expanded west toward Naismith Drive or east in the direction of the Computer Center. However, an expansion would not accommodate as much equipment as a new building. Chappell said that if a new facility were constructed, the University would attempt to keep the facility close to campus. One site the administration has considered is on land south of Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"We are hoping that the new facilities will offer multiple purposes for student use," said Bob Lockwood, Robinson Center facility director. "This is a chance for students to have more organized intramural activities and be able to deviate in really diverse areas. New facilities would offer students improved services and
more organized activities for which they can compete."
Besides the need for more recreation equipment, plans to create more facilities were sparked by students' increased interest in recreation and sports clubs, Lockwood said.
"Recreation gives a student the opportunity to go out at their own pace, reduce stress anxiety, get in a health pattern, and it may increase their academic performance as well." Lockwood said. "We are hoping that with the help of the student advisory board, that we can figure out what recreation facilities the students really want."
Lockwood said the administration had not determined what equipment an expanded facility would house. With the help of student interest, a plan could be proposed this fall, and the planning process potentially could be completed by April, Chappell said.
"Our mission is to provide facilities and recreational opportunities for this institution." Chappell said. "We are looking ahead at life with the needs of students in mind."
The University plans to phase in the new facilities, Chappell said. Recreation Services currently is gathering ideas for the new facilities based on student interest. The University then will be able to determine how much the construction of new facilities will raise student fees. Chappell said that the advisory board was working to come up with a plan that only would charge students who used the new facilities.
Robinson Center summer hours for recreational use are Monday through Friday, 6 to 8 a.m., 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. Robinson Center is open Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 8 p.m. For more information, contact the center at 864-3491.
4
2B
Quick Looks
Wednesday July 8,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (July 8):
If you have been thinking about getting another degree, do it this year. It could lead to a big increase in income. The lesson you learn in July is through experience. Save most of August for romance.
Aries (March 21-April 19) - Today is a 7.
Avoid keeping a secret. It will end up costing you more than it is worth. Tell the truth to your partner, your boss or both.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is a 6.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is an 8.
Do not discuss anything serious until the afternoon.
Other people might be willing to gamble in the morning,
but you should not. Only go for a sure thing.
Watch where you put your purse or wallet. Do not spend more than you can afford on your credit cards either.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is a 5.
A disagreement will be more annoying this morning than tonight. That is because tonight you will be winning. Shopping could be complicated during the day
You could learn something interesting today from a beautiful person. If you see one, follow him or her around and ask questions. This could develop into a nice friendship.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is a 6.
Business and romance should both go well today, especially if you are working with the one you love Be careful about spending money.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is an 8.
Pay attention this morning, there could be a quiz. You will do fine if you rely on your experience. If you are tired tonight, you will relax best in the security of an old-fashioned ritual.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 7.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is an 8.
Pay back a debt you owe your best friend if you ever want to get another favor from that source. You can solve a problem.
You will probably want to spend more than you can afford this morning. Resist the temptation. You may need the money for something more important.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Today is a 7.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is an 8.
If you are planning ahead, schedule your major tasks for this afternoon. You will probably work far into the night. Do not take a friendly flirt too seriously.
Make your phone calls early. People will be too busy to talk later. If you need to look up information, do it early too.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today is a 6.
LION
T
LIBRARY CENTER
A group discount may not be as good as it seems. Hold on to your money for a while, and a better deal may show up.
Kristen May, a senior at the Lincoln College Preparatory Academy in Kansas City, Mo., has verbally committed to play for the University of Kansas for the 1999-2000 school year.
One of the nation's top high school point guards has verbally committed to the University of Kansas women's basketball team.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Women's hoops announces new recruit, assistant coach
May, who plays point guard for the Lady Lincoln Tigers, has been contacted by more than 50 universities since entering high school. She will officially sign with the University of Kansas in November.
SCORPIUS
May has been honored with All-League, All-District, All-Metro honorable mention and Missouri 3A All-State first team selections. She is viewed as one of the top 10 point guards in the nation by many of the top women's basketball college
recruiters.
The women's basketball team also announced the hiring of assistant coach Deborah Newkirk. Newkirk, 1986 graduate of Pittsburg State University, has spent four years as the head basketball, volleyball and track and field.
field coach at Thomas Jefferson Independent Day School in Joplin, Mo. Newkirk also has served as the head basketball and volleyball coach at Hiawatha High School and junior varsity coach at Columbus High School.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
Newkirk has been involved with basketball camps during the past several years including the Marian Washington Basketball Camp.
Newkirk was named the Ozark Eight Conference Coach of the Year in 1997-98 and has received many other awards for her teaching and coaching abilities.
Newkirk replaces Misty Opat, an assistant coach at Kansas for the last three years.
弓
V
—Melinda Weaver
MLB
than four million votes, had intended to pass up the home run contest but changed his mind after being boored during batting practice.
derby on Monday at the 1998 Major League Baseball All-Star game. Griffey, who led fan balloting for the game with more
Griffey hit eight homers in each of the first two rounds and then beat Cleveland's Jim Thome 3-2 in the final. Mark McGwire, baseball's homer-hitting leader, hit just four homers and did not get past the first round.
The Associated Press
Hundley to return to Mets Saturday as an outfielder
Late-entry Griffey wins homer-hitting contest
DENVER — Ken Griffey Jr. won the home run
Mets
NEW YORK — The New York Mets announced
catcher-turned-outfielder Todd Hundley, who had reconstructive surgery on his right elbow last September, will return to the team for Saturday's game against Montreal. Hundley initially had resisted changing positions when N:
York acquired All-Star catcher Mike Piazza from the Florida Marlins in a May 22 trade.
Longest U.S. Women's Open ends with birdie putt in sudden death
The Associated Press
KOHLER, Wis. — Se Ri Pak became the youngest U.S. Women's Open champion after hitting an 18-foot birdie on the 20th extra hole. She beat amateur Jenny Chusairiporn in the longest Women's open in history.
The two were tied after the 18-hole extra round before Pak won on the second sudden-death hole.
It marked the first time the tournament went to sudden death. Chuasiriporn made a riveting 40-foot putt on the final hole Sunday, forcing the playoff. She barely missed a 10-foot putt for par on the same hole.
The Associated Press
Krupp flies away: Defenseman leaving Avalanche for Red Wings
The Associated Press
DETROIT — Two years after scoring the biggest goal in Colorado Avalanche history, Uwe Krupp will be playing for a competitor. Krupp, who scored the overtime goal that gave the Colorado Avalanche the 1996 Stanley Cup, signed a four-year contract with the 1997-98 Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings.
NCAA to review ruling that forces schools to compete on Sundays
PROVO, Utah — The NCAA's board of directors will be forced to review its decision that requires schools
NCAA
to play Sunday games or forfeit them.
Ninety-seven schools joined Mormon-owned Brigham Young and Campbell — a North Carolina school with strong Baptist ties — in calling for a new
The group of objecting schools fell one request short of the 100 needed to suspend the policy change until the NCAA's convention in San Antonio in January. Only 30 requests were needed to force a review.
of the board's April decision to eliminate the so-called Brigham Young University rule. The rule allowed the NCAA to adjust schedules to accommodate schools with policies against Sunday competition.
The Associated Press
SPORTS CALENDAR
Today
WNBA Basketball
World Cup Soccer Second semifinal at 2 p.m. on ESPN
Houston Comets at New York Liberty at 6:30 p.m. on ESPN
Tomorrow
Baseball
Atlanta Braves at Florida Marlins at 6 p.m.
on TBS
Golf
Ford Senior Players Championship, First Round from Dearborn, Mich., at 2 p.m. on ESPN
MLS Soccer
Chicago Fire at Columbus Crew at 6:30
q.m.po FSPN
Championship Bull Riding
Desert Challenge from Tucson, Ariz., at 7
p.m. on TNN
Championship Bull Riding
Stilt life
Tom Thompson stands on stilts as he applies drywall finish to the ceiling of the Stauffer-Flint Hall auditorium. Thompson works for the company that is renovating the auditorium. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
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Don't miss this magical romantic fairy tale
Prelude to a Kiss
by Craig Lucas
July 16,18,24,25,1998
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
All performances are at 8:00 p.m. in the Crafton Preyer Theatre For mature audiences.
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box offices:
Murphy Hall, 864-3982;
Lied Center, 864-ARTS,
SUA Office, 864-3477;
public $10, all students $5, senior citizens $9 both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
Proudly Dedicated by KU Student Senate Area 10 Fee
STUDENT
SENATE
r
Wednesday, July 8, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B·Page 3
Germs can spoil food, fun
Caution urged in preparing for cookouts
By Leslie Potter
Kanson staff writer
Food-borne illnesses pose a greater risk during the summer months, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
"Microbes that cause foodborne illnesses reproduce faster in warm temperatures," said Steve Paige, director of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment Bureau of Environmental Health Services. "We generally hear reports of food-borne illnesses more frequently during the summer months."
The most common food contaminants are E. coli, salmonella, hepatitis A and Norwalk, said Don Brown, public information officer for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. Eating foods infected with these microbes can cause mild-to-life-threatening symptoms, he said.
"These microscopic organisms infect the digestive tract," Brown said. "They have the abl-
ity to live on food for extended periods of time. Even if the food is frozen, the bacteria can reproduce again once it's thawed."
Most of the organisms can cause flu-like symptoms such as diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, headache and fever.
"If you have symptoms that occur longer than a day and get worse, you should see a physician," Brown said.
Food-borne illnesses can be prevented with proper food preparation.
Paige recommended washing hands before food preparation and cooking meat until its center is gray or brown.
"These organisms thrive and grow at temperatures between 45 degrees to 140 degrees," Brown said. "During the cooking process, after 140 degrees you begin to kill the organisms. At 160 degrees, you have effectively killed all of the organisms."
Brown said that disease-causing microbes could live on surfaces such as knives, cutting boards and counter tops. Knives and plates touched by uncooked meat should never be used for cooked meat because contamination could result.
"Food-borne illness is easy to prevent," Paige said. "Proper food handling and preparation make the difference."
COLUMBIA
Alicia Probasco, Ozawkie sophomore, prepares to barbecue on her back patio. Precautions should be taken to avoid food-borne illness. Photo by Lizz Weber / KANSAN
NOW gets names for petition at fair area group to meet
By Joyce Newman
Kansan staff writer
The National Organization for Women set up a booth last Thursday at the Lilith Fair.
"We got a great response at the booth," said Lockhart. "There was a continuous stream of beoole."
Kansas NOW State Coordinator Sharon Lockhart and two members of the national chapter attended the fair and passed out information.
Some people who visited the booth signed a petition for the "Love Your Body Campaign." This petition is being used to stop the exploitation of women's bodies to endorse products, Lockhart said.
Although there is not a NOW chapter at the University of Kansas, the Lawrence chapter gets involved with many campus groups. Co-President of the Lawrence NOW chapter, Sylvie Rueff, says the Feminist Coalition had served as a sister group in past years.
When women issues arise, all groups join together and support one another, Rueff said. One such supported group is Women's Transitional Care Services, which helps women who need to leave their homes because of violence, abuse or other reasons. Another group supported by NOW and others is the Rape Victim Survivors Services.
Some of the issues NOW is focusing on for the upcoming election year is birth control, affirmative action and educational issues including opportunities for women in school and sex education.
"A lot of women come together from different groups and get involved," Rueff said. "There's a lot of overlap."
"The strongest part of our chapter is our communication network. We keep everyone aware and informed by phone and newsletters." Rueff said.
The next meeting for the Lawrence NOW chapter is 10 a.m. Tuesday, July 14. For more information or questions on how to get involved call Rueff at 832-2992.
Largest Oakley selection in Midwest!
* backpacks
* hats
* polo shirts
* t-shirts
* replacement lenses
* ear and nose pieces
* cases
* bags
LAWRENCE
Sportcenter
KANSAS
840 Massachusetts
842-NIKE (6453)
Special orders at no extra charge!
O
VII.
LAWRENCE
Sportcenter
KANSAS
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
18 & Over WED. JULY 8
25 Cent
Disco Draws
THURS. JULY 9 18 & Over FLICK
student union
rubber
18 & Over FRI. JULY 10 The Grateful Dead Rules !!!
The DEAL
18 & Over SAT. JULY 11 Jesse Jackson 5
Sugga Daddies
18 & Over SUN. JULY 12 SWING SET
swing • big band • dance
specialty cocktails
MON. JULY 16 18 & Over The Damnations
The Gourds
18 & Over TUES. JULY 14 Open Mic
UPCOMING
7/16 Robbie Fulks
7/17 The Matt Wilson Band
7/20 Hepcat
7/21 Drugstore
7/29 Victor Wooten/Steve Bailev
RECYCLE your Daily Kansan
CPR can save a life in a heartbeat.
VIII
NATURALWAY
- 820-822 MASS. * 841-0100 • NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
Training classes cover adult/child/infant CPR using American Heart Association materials. $10 fee for students, $15 for non-students.
July 8 W 5:00 p.m.--8:00 p.m.
July 18 Sa 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
July 23 Th 5:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
864-9570 to sign up.
HEALTH
Since
1906
Watkins
Caring
For KU
CENTER
¢ 785.864.9500
//www.ukans.edu/home/watkins
- 820-822 MASS. * 841-0100*
HEALTH Since 1906
Watkins
Caring For KU CENTER
785.864.9500
//www.ukans.edu/home/watkins
M on day Nigt N it ro J u l y 2 0 t h details coming Soon!
Retro & Dance
Wednesdays
Thursday
$1.50 Anything
No Cover
Friday
Retro Night
$2.50 Pitchers
$2.00 Wells
&
$1
ANYTHING
No Cover Until
10:00
Saturday Open at 7:00
$1.00
Anything
842-9845
Downtown Lawrence
SIDEWALK
SALE!
Thursday
July 16th
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
ESTABLISHED 1854
From Sunup
to Sundown
Buy Sell Trade
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-PLAY 1029 Mass
$ $ $ $ $
$$
$$
$$
$$
$
Save Money!
On FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED Apartments for Fall!
*Affordable Rent
*Affordable Rent
$ *2, 3, & 4 Bedrooms
$ *Quality Service
$ *Close to Campus
$ *Designed for Privacy
$ *Private Parking
$ *Locally Owned
$ *Locally Managed
$ *Laundry Facilities**
$ *Close to Shopping
$ *On-Site Manager**
$ *Swimming Pool**
$ *Microwave**
$ *Washer/Dryer**
$ *KU Bus Route**
$ *Professional Mainten
ORCHARDS CORNERS
15th & Kasold
749-4226
REGENTS COURT
19th & Mass.
749-0445
SUNDANCE 7th & Florida 841-5255
**Available at some locations ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIALS!
Models
Models Open Daily!
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm * Sat 10am-4pm * Sun 1pm-4pm Call MASTERCRAFT today.842-4455
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The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 8, 1998
The Etc. Shop
1 ST
MIDDLEBURY, FLORIDA
928 Mass. Downtown Park in the rear
NATURALWAY
The Castle Tea Room by Reservation Only Call 843-1151
- NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
- NATURAL BODY CARE
- 820-822 MASS.
• 841-0100.
THE GREAT DEATH OF MARY
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES
CHEST OF DRAWERS
unclaimed freight &
damaged merchandise
936 Mace
Finc Line Tattoo Inc.
& Body Piercing
"We are under your skin."
"We get under your skin"
Family Owned & Operated 30 yrs exp
1000s of Designs Custom Work
Quality Work Reasonably Priced
Tattoos Guaranteed Ear Life
Wed.-Sat. 12:30-8 PM
1826 Massachusetts Lawrence 749-3502
29th & Massachusetts Topeka 233-8288
fifi's
fifi's Euro-Bistro
An elegant dining experience
Lunch and dinners
from $5.95-$9.95
925 Iowa
841-7226
ence
Cedarwood Apartments
Now Leasing Four Bedroom Duplexes
- Newly Redecorated Units - Dishwasher
- Central Heat & Air Condition - Low Utilities
- Close to Mall - On KU Bus Route
- Washer and Dryer Hock Up - Swimming Pool
CALL Karin
843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Avenue
The Mid-West's Most Elite Juice Bar
Juicers
Shoungils
Who needs alcohol when you've got US?
★ WEDNESDAY'S STUDENT NIGHT:
$3.00 ADMISSION WITH KUID
★ 20 NUDE DANCERS
★ BACHELOR, GROUP &
FRATERNITY PARTIES
(GROUP DISCOUNT)
913 N. 2nd ST.
841-4122
Special!
Extra study room or guest room!
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
3 bedroom plus - $730
Sundance
7th & Florida
841-5255
3 bedroom plus - $690
Column
It is impossible to stereotype the average American college student, but it is possible to observe that college students are more practical and individualistic than their grandparents ever were. Some female students have discarded the traditional notion of marrying a tall, dark and handsome rich man. Those who still cling to the fantasy, do so discretely.
Most college males no longer think about acquiring an education to secure a decent job and provide for a nuclear family. These old-fashioned mind sets have been disregarded as we face a modern society with personal and professional options.
Traditional roles not only option in today's world
Pakistani women in work force
For better or worse, this is not the case for most Pakistani college students. Pakistani males still shoulder the burden of being the sole breadwinner of their households. However, most seek a wife who is well-educated and reasonably independent. Pakistani females are as intelligent and capable as American females, but many maintain concepts antiquated by Western standards. They are raised to be less individualistic and more
jobs or at least put their careers on hold for children. Pakistani society shuns the concept of child-care centers. Culturally and religiously, a woman's role is at home. This is not a symbol of degradation or inferiority, but a traditional method of ensuring children will be raised in a stable, nurturing environment. In Pakistan, a mother is with her child from diapers to college and sometimes beyond.
accepting of the conventional life pattern of studying, marrying and becoming a homemaker. Nonetheless, many women today are pursuing graduate degrees so that they can support themselves as the word divorce begins to slowly edge its way into the Pakistani vocabulary.
Nadia Mustafa
editor@kansan.com
Pakistan
Islamabad
Afghanistan
Iran
India
Saudi Arabia
Karachi
Indian Ocean
AREA OF DETAIL
M.D. Bradshaw/KANSAN
It's no secret that this phenomenon has become comparatively rare in the United States as more women strive for individual success and personal fulfillment. I embrace American principles of equality and individualism and cherish the fact that there is always another civil rights lawsuit or social movement around the corner. I plan on pursuing a career and making the most out of the increasingly woman-friendly society. Despite my liberalism, I recognize that there are two sides to every story, and we cannot ignore the not-so-rosy side of the American one. Along with the individualistic trend, we have witnessed drastic increases in problems such as juvenile crime and teen pregnancy, accompanied by decreasing family values and moral standards. Studies have suggested that the holes in our social fabric are at home.
Before feminists roll their eyes, it is important to remember that there are aggressive, working women in Pakistan. Maleeha Lodhi was Pakistan's ambassador to the United States and is now the editor of a major newspaper. Asma Jahangir is a famous lawyer and human rights activist. Benazir Bhutto was prime minister and is now the political opposition leader. These are only a few prominent examples of the strides women have made in their attempts to enter the work force, but old habits die hard. It will probably be a couple of generations before there are as many working women as working men in Pakistan.
between traditional roles and fierce individualism, but we don't live in an ideal world. Pakistanis may lack many of the modern, liberal social options, but they benefit from moral stability and family values. Americans may enjoy the fruits of a self-fulfilling, individualistic society, but many homes and neighborhoods are rampant with social problems and show no signs of improving.
The number of Pakistani women who want to work is growing,but most will quit their
Although many U.S. politicians and social activists are calling for a return to family values, it might be too late. As rapid Westernization in Pakistan places the nation at the brink of risky change in the upper echelons of society, the universal cycle continues.
Nadia Mustafa is a Topeka sophmore in journalism and English.
The ideal would be a balance
COCO LOGO
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
943 MASSACHUSETTS-842-1414
WORLD CUP FINAL THIS SUNDAY PARTY STARTS AT 1:00pm
MARGARITAS 2 for 1 Brazilian Caipirihnas $1.50
GOCO LOGO: YUMMY, GOZY, & FUN, FUN, FUN..
If you've seen this grin
please
contact It's
Free
Legal Services
for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
Jo Hardesty, Director
STUDENT
SENATE
T
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
119 On campus
120 announcements
121 Entertalment
130 Lost and Found
男士 女士
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
Classified Policy
320 Sporting Goods
325 Stereo Equipment
320 Automotive
400 Auto Sales
345 Motorscycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
360 Miscellaneous
370 Motorscycles for Sale
400s Real Estate
A
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
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.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which
makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation"
100s Announcements
105 - Personals
Looking for true love?
Find it online.
www.collegestudent.com
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
F
120 - Announcements
First Call For Help
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
Telephone/In person
24 Hours
841-2345
120 - Announcements
J
Beds, Desks, Bookcases, Chester Drawers,
Everything But Ice, 936 Mass.
Corn Roast Farmer's Market. Garden bug tag,
Corn Roast Farmer's Market. Market also
tag; Thur 4:00-6:30pm, Market also
tag.
Looking for true love?
Find it online.
www.collegestudent.com
Own your own Computer Consultation company Check out the Hand Technologies ad @ www.collegestudent.com
Sales/Marketing Representatives forCollegestudent.com Flex hrs, great pay Ryse 888-915-6200
Kansan Ads Pay
Great Jobs for College students. www.collegestudent.com
Great used cars, online.
Point your browser to
www.collegestudent.com
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
BASS PLAYER WANTED for Top 40 private beers, 793-6494
Beers, 793-6494
Great Jobs for College students. www.collegestudent.com
Part-time help needed now and then next year in
January 2016: 8:10-13:30 M 20 wks./hr.
Please call 749-8013.
Superstar cook wanted. Browne, Suite experience preferred 95 and up. Great benefits. 89th
The Vans Warped Tour islook for workers. If you like punk tour, boarding and sleeping at the train station, Kali calls a
Part-time nanny needed for 20 mo. old twins, in our home. Experience w/toddlers required, begining August 18th, 8-5 M, W, F. Willing to consider 2 part-time persons. contact Diane at 864-0638.
Sales/Marketing Representatives for CollegeStudent.com Flex hrs, great pay. Ryssue 888-915-6200
Therapist needed for eleven year old boy with Autism. Must like children and be willing to learn applied behavior analysis procedures. Training provided. Please call Selma (816) 361-3914.
The Granda is looking for interested lighting interns for dance nights and concerts for the fall. Training to begin immediately. Please contact Jenne or Scott at 842-1390.
CommunityWorks Inc. is currently hiring personal assistants for day, evening, weekend, and overnight to work with people with head injury. Contact us at CommunityWorks Inc. 913-341-8679 ext.302 Leavenworth office, Call (913) 341-8679 ext.302
205 - Help Wanted
Pipeline Productions, the area's finest concert promotion company is looking for interns for the fall. if you like live music, enjoy working hard, and have a desire to get into the industry, call Kelly at 748-3655.
Are you available to work weekends and holidays? Come join our team. Rueschheff Comm. 24 hr. telephone answering service needs you. Must be detail oriented and possess good comm. skills. Long term part-time all shifts avail. Apply in person 2411 W6th St.
DISABLED STUDENTS
If you are experiencing problems receiving needed, effective accommodations at KU (e.g. note takers), dial 942-3882. Sharing your experience with the staff can help the call. System at 8-on-9 or 6 on-10.
Part-time Mother's Helper/Cook for busy family this coming school year. Meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking and light housekeeping are parts of the job. Other sisters help take care of the children. You must have experience based on experience. Must have own car. Work to start in August, but can start immediately. Please send letter with list of work experiences 1012 Lawrence, KS 65494-480 W. 15th St. Suite 1012, Lawrence KS 65494
Programming Assistant/Office Assistant (Student Hourly rate of 5.50 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center (Language Lab). Responsible for equipment for data entry, duplicating audio and video materials, typing and keeping inventory of supplies, other light office work, and description of the equipment and application at 4069 Westcause Hall. For information, call 804-7455. Deadline August 14, 1998.
Librarian (Student Hourly rate of 5.78 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center (Language Labs). Responsibilities include assisting lab patrons, using computer equipment for data entry, duplicating audio and video materials, typing and keeping inventory of supplies, accessioning books, managing catalogs, developing and special projects in conjunction with vendor. Pick up full job description with required qualifications and application at 4089 Wesco Hall. For information, call 684-4785.
1
Wednesday, July 8, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 5
205 - Help Wanted
---
Chair Director part time, Sept-May. Perry UMc
Box 35, KS. KGS 6071 (785) 266-4997
Computer Assistant (Student Hourly rate of 6.50 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center Language Labs). Respondents are performing routine maintenance on Maintenance windows computers, installing computer software maintaining library of software and upgrade patches, trouble shooting hardware and softwares in the maintenance of the Center's Web page, assisting in the computer workshops and other special projects required of a supervisor. Pick up full job description with required qualifications and application at 4089 Wescock Hall. For information, call 664-4785.
Project Engineer
Packer-Ware/Berry Plastics seeks individual to help design, install and maintain equipment. Will utilize the input of employees, vendors, contract management toward improvement of our facility and enhance process. Work will involve compressors, chiller and telephone systems, automation and facility logistics. Great opportunity for B.M.S.E, or I.E.g. graded schedule. Strong benefit & compensation package to Packer-Ware Corporation, HR Mr., 2330 N. Eagle Rd., Lawrence, KS 66409, Fax 785/8428 EOE.
$$$$$Cash for Employment$$$$$
Kansas and Burge Unions' Food Services
Catering Department
Hiring Caterers for: Thursday, July 9, 1988
3pm-10pm, Thursday, July 25, 1988 3pm-10pm.
$8.15/hr. Will pay in cash on day following employment. Applicants will be able to stand for long periods, be willing to follow dress code norms & clean in appearance and enjoy food service work. Apply Kansas and Burge Union's Personnel Office, Level 5, 13th and Oread. Qualified applicants will be hired at time of application. AAA/EO
Business Manager
Public Policy & Business Research. Application deadline July 17, 1988. 100% time. Salary range: $35,000 - 40,000. Successful applicant will report to $35,000 and the business manager of the Institute, and manage it. Employees are required day operations. Responsibilities include administrative office management, human resources, management. Required qualifications: BA or equivalent in an office management, budget preparation and management, and team work; excellent oral and written communication skills; knowledge of PC-based communication skills; experience in WordPerfect, Lotus, Microsoft Excel, and Masters' degree in business administration and/or accounting, knowledge of University policies and procedures, training in multi-tasking, setting up new environments, administrative experiences in auditing, and organizational evaluation skills. Submit vitae or resume and cover letter summarizing references to Charles Krider, Director, IPHRR, 60 Bell Hall University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. 60405 (785) 846-3701, EO/AA
Student Housing Dining Services
Starting Pay $5.50/hour Flexible Schedules Make New Friends Gain Valuable Experience Convenient Locations Scholarship Opportunities
Call or stop by any Dining Center
Ekdahl Dining - 864-2260
Oliver Dining - 864-4087
GSP Dining - 864-3120
Hashinger Office - 864-1014
EEO/AA Employer
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
300s
Merchandise
TRAFIC-DUJ'S
PERSONAL INJURY
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Stroke Care
16 East 13th 842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
X
AAA Resumes, Cover Letters, Mock Interviews,
and Job Counseling. Makeable. Use the most
solid investment you can in your future, invest
some time in yourself. Call (785) 1311-2170.
235 - Typing Services
Own your own Computer Consultation company Check out the Hand Technologies ad @ www.collegestudent.com
305 - For Sale
S
LARGER/FIRMER BREASTS !!!
Safe and Affordable alternative to implants!
Fast Results! Toll-Free 1-877-4-BREAST
225 - Professional Services
---
Now hiring part & full time days & late evenings.
$6.00 plus per hour.
Apply in person:
Tues.-Sat. 10:00-5:00 p.m.
1408 W. 23rd & 1220 W. 6th
EOE
---
Great used cars, online.
Point your browser to
www.collegestudent.com
340 - Auto Sales
TACO BELL
MIRACLE VIDEO - Summer Sale. ALL ADULT
VIDEOS TAPES $12.98 & up. Come in at 1910
Haskell Ave. or call 841-7504.
---
731 New Hampshire 841-0550
THE CHAPMAN USED & CURIOUS GOODS
360-Miscellaneous
BUY • SELL • TRADE
VERSACE
$ $ $ $ $
W
GAME GUY
VIDEO GAMES
BUY
SELL
TRADE
- PC CD ROM
- Nintendo 64
- Game Boy
- Super Nintendo
- Game Boy
7 East Seventh
331-0080
www.game-guy.com
$
www.game-guy.com
$$$$$
370 - Want to Buy
WANTED:
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward for your good used computer.
UNI Computers 841-4611
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
$1200 6-7 BR, Avail Aug 1, deposit, lease, no pets.
843-160-1.
Excellent location in 1104 Tenn. near UMKU_2
BRA Apt. 14 p/c a/x, $pnt. 410. Note: 1.84 UMKU_2
1 bdmr avail. July 15, 1000 Block Ohio. W/D included $400, 799-546.
Available August, 1128 Ohio, spacious 2 bedroom apt. between campus and downtown. Close to GSP & Corbin. No pets. Keswos + utilities. 841-1207
Spacious two bedroom apartment. Two bedroom $360 per month. 635 West 25th Street. Call 843-6447.
BEATHEWATER WALLEY APARTMENTS
BEATHEWATER DL, Open 1 pm - 6pm. Mm-Fri.
845-7844
3 BR Apt, Neur KU, Utilities paid $900 lease deposit Pnets 4681-16aw Allov 1
4 BDRM / 2 bathroom apt, at Campus Place avail.
Aug 1988 until Aug. 1999. Excellent location, close to campus.叫 CalBck at 785-841-1429.
BEST PREMIUM
Nice, clean, quiet. All appliances, a/c bus.
Rt. pool, quiet. Low utilities. No smok.
No fireplace. No heat.
OREAD NEIGHBORHOOD
Several good 2 BR apts. in 1200 Ohio block. W/D
hookups. Available Aug. $450.
George Waters Mmt
George Waters Mnmt
841-5533
1 & 2 R&aVs陪 for summer and fall. Nice, quiet & clean W. Lawrence location. Private patio/balcony. On KU bus route. Easy to 7-10 min. laundry facility & swimming pool, on site. CAW.Dr. Starting at $370-$450. Drop in any time 9:6 Mon-Fri. Call Hall Apartment: 843-9011
3 & 4 Rhs. avail for summer & full Nice quiet clean & W. Lawrence location. Walk in to suite, 2 baths, on KU bus route, easy access to dry facility & swimming pool on site. Ca, CH, DH. Starting at $630-$760. Drop in anytime 9-6 Mon-Fri. Call Hotel Apartments. #435-001 to view.
405 - Apartments for Rent
Nice and large 1000sq ft amenity with back yard, Nice and large to campus less than a mile, two bedrooms with kitchen and newly remodeled bathroom, washer and dryer, last long. call 785 842-9252, available August 1st.
MUSIC BAR
1
GREAT 1 BEDROOM
apts. at newer complex 6th & Iowa. D/W.
microwave, C/A/W d/w hookups. "Stacked." Onsite laundry available. Some carports available.
No pets, please. $395. Available now.
George Waters Mgmt.
GREAT1 BEDROOM
SIANNON PLAZA
quiet location
*495 all wards. W/D, built in bookshelves*
2 BR townhome for Aug. move in - loft style, 2 full baths,
1 w / jacqueline tub & skylight, FP,
garage/opener $720 + tile
Call 841-7726
2100 Heathergate#A-2
Hurry...Don't miss this!
Immediate Availability
1 & 2 BR apts;
3 BR townhouses,
$365 & up
Extended hours
10-4 Mon.-Fri.
9-4 Sat.
GRAYSTONE
2012 W. 6th St. 749-1102
1 & 2 Bedrooms
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Exercise Room
Part25
25 2Pools/2LaundryRooms
Volleyball Court
Oleyball Court
25 On KU Bus Route
(25) On KU Bus Route
(25) SomeW/D联卖
$ \textcircled{25} $ SomeW/DHookups
Low Deposits
Small Pets Welcome
Now leasing for the summer and fall semesters. Very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments available.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Holiday Apartments
PALM TREE ISLAND
Leasing for Summer and Fall
Leasing for Summer and Fa
1 Bedroom $370
2 Bedroom $435
3 Bedroom $630
4 Bedroom $760
-Swimming Pool
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
Call 843-0011 or 550-0011
Office Hours
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
Cedarwood Apartments
LCA Apartments, Inc.
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
• Swimming pool
On site Laundry facilities
• Air Conditioning
Close to shopping &
restaurants
On KU Bus route
REASONABLE PRICES!
- Furnished and unfurnished
- Located block from campus
- On KU bus route
- AC, DW, disposal, W/D,
microwave
Call Karin Now!
843-1116
411 Codename A
- Pets welcome (at selected locations)
- Spacious houses/apts.
- 2,3,4 BRs
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
- Parking lots, balconies
* Roommate needed for 3&4 bdrm
nots.
arking lots, balconies
Call 749-3794
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere.
405 - Apartments for Rent
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route
VILLAGE SQUARE
apartment
9th & Avalon • 842-3040
KVM
NOW LEASING FOR
SUMMER & FALL '98
STUDIOS; 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS;
DUPLEXES & HOMES
GREAT LOCATION!
Call 841-6080 or stop by
Aspen West
808 W.24th St.
- Studios, 1,2,3, bedroom apt.
- Jamestown Apartments
- Alabama Place Apartments
- Pin Oak Townhomes
- Red Oak Apartments
- Fountain Homes
- Eddingham Place Apartments
- West Meadows Condos
- 24 hr Maintenance
- Pets O.K. in Some Locations
Now Leasing for Fall!
- 2 & 3 bedroom townhome
- Available now and a few
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
for August
- Water Paid
- Basic cable paid
405 - Apartments for Rent
- Water paid in apt
Monday-Friday 8:5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Meadowbrook
- Walking distance to campus
- Cable Paid
RESERVE YOUR NEW HOME TODAY!
- No Pets
- Laundry on Site
M mastercraft management
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
WALK TO CAMPUS
Campus Place
- Reasonable rates
Hanover Place 14th & Mass 841-1212
Manover Place
14th & Mass • 841-1212
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
2900 West 15th Lawrence, KS 66049 865-2500
Regents Court
19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood
Equal Housing Opportunity
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
Sun 1pm-4pm
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
S
wan
Management
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1-bedroom $345
2-bedroom $420
NEWER!
ABERDEEN
TOWNHOMES
2 & 3 bedroom
Starting at $695
NEW!
SUMMERTREE WEST TOWNHOMES 2-bedroom/2-level Starting at $550 NEWER!
OPEN HOUSE
M-F 1-5
Sat. 10-4
Sun, 1-4
2300 Wakarusa Dr. SE Corner of Clinton Pkwy and Wakarusa Dr.
405 - Apartments for Rent
749-1288
Home
Real nice & 12 bdrm apts, close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off street parking. Absl. no pets. Avail. Aug 1. at 1037Kentucky. Call 749-2919
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
END CAPABLE ENTRY
Fireplace
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KVM
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- Professionally Managed By
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Unfurnished 3 DBRM, 2 Bath, complete kitchen,
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415 - Homes For Rent
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Real nice spacious 5 bdmr house close to KU.
Hardwood floors, lots of windows. Absolutely NO pets. 749-2919
- By phone: 864-4358
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430 - Roommate Wanted
١٠٣٤
NS responsible female roommate needed to share new, large 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Pinnacle Woods.
$377.50 +1/2 utilities . 749-2280
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
One female roommate wanted. Garage parking available, washer/dryer, own bathroom. Available Aug. 1. Call 843-4121.
Seeking quiet responsible female student to share coxy 2 bdrm second floor apt. at 1212 Louisiana. 965-2811
Roommate needs to support 2 bdrm apt. Close to campus. On bus route. Laundry facilities in building. Avail. Aug ist.1$95/mo & 1/2 utls. Call 331-2837 for more information or to view at.
Roommate: Grad, and Undergrad gals seek
friendly, considerate, N/S roomie for 3 bdrm.
house. Avail. Aug. 1. Must like pets. $240 +1/u-titles.
832-9587
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 8, 1998
Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
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NESTRICTIONS SUBJECT TO CHANGE
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Movie Review
Armageddon predictable, improbable
Movie's plot bores and action scenes lack excitement
By Jeremy M. Doherty Kansan movie critic
Stacked with gruff heroes, snappy one-liners and relentless shots of the American flag, Armageddon is a summer blockbuster. Surprisingly, very little of the testosterone-drenched
10.5 km/h (6.7 mi/h) at a speed of 23.0 km/h (14.2 mi/h).
STAR WARS
Bruce Willis stars as Harry S. Stamper, a deep core oil driller and Earth's only hope. An asteroid will annihilate all life on Earth unless Stamper can find a way to blow it to kingdom come. Contributed Photo
pyrotechnics in Michael Bay's asteroid epic rate higher than a raised eyebrow on the curiosity meter. Every explosion or relationship in Armageddon is tightly choreographed and filmed with embarrassing predictability. Audiences should bring decks of cards to keep busy with while the plot machinery rumbles.
The movie begins with a 2001-style shot of the earth from outer space as Charlton Heston's voice lectures about the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. It happened once, Ben-Hur drones, and it will happen again.
Armageddon, which is produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. Contributed Photo
Landing on the surface of an asteroid that is on a collision course with Earth, a team of drillers plant nuclear explosives in the action film
Sure enough, a storm of rocks makes minemeetau of New York, and U.S. bureaucrats put themselves on alert. A huge rock the size of Texas managed to bypass all of NASA's detection technology and is hurtling toward a date with the Earth.
NASA calls in Bruce Willis, the best deep-core driller in the world. How it determined that is anybody's guess. Perhaps there is some sort of Championship Drilling Bowl held annually in Cleveland.
course in Astronautics 101. The plan is that Willis and his buddies, who together look like they wandered in off the set of a Budweiser commercial, are going to rocket into space and land on the rock. They will drill a huge hole, drop off a warhead and fly home in a blaze of glory.
Willis and his team of roughnecks, which includes Steve Buscemi from Reservoir Dogs and Ben Affleck from Good Will Hunting, spend about 45 minutes of movie time receiving a crash
Plot improbabilities aside, director Bay soaks the few emotional elements of *Armageddon*, such as a romantic subplot between Affleck and Willis' daughter (an underused
Liv Tyler) in enough schmaltz to choke Steven Spielberg.
Furthermore, Bay, a veteran of music videos and commercials, is clearly aware of how absurd his story is and tries to dress it up with a disjointed grab-bag of tricks. We get overhead, low-angle and crane shots, all edited at 200 cuts per minute. Bay seems unable to shoot a simple scene, with the camera resting steadily, which would allow it to build to its own rhythm. The script, credited to a whopping
ARMAGEDDON
Kansan Rating: ** out of *****
Running time: 2 hours, 30 minutes
Rated PG-13 for sci-fi disaster
action, sensuality and brief moments
of vulgar language
total of nine writers, makes the earlier asteroid flick, Deep Impact, look like a Fellini film. The result of their efforts is akin to gorging on a strict diet of SweetTarts for about a week.
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COUNTRY KITCHEN
Academic Computing Services gives you the skills to confidently navigate the information superhighway. All of our internet training is FREE and doesn't require registration. Classes are open to everyone. Just show up at the Computer Center or the Budig Hall Computer Lab at classtime.
FREE INTERNET TRAINING Academic Computing Services Week of July 13-17
Web-Database integration—Learn basic database fundamentals, covering database design; SQL; table creation; and inserting, updating, and selecting table data. Create a Web-based interface to a database with an HTML form and CGI scripting, and see how to combine a database and CGI script to produce dynamic Web content. Work through the hands-on examples using mSQL and Perl in the UNIX environment of ACS's multiser systems. The wide range of other available tools is also discussed. Prerequisite: HTML forms and CGI scripts or equivalent skills.
Wed. July 15, 6-9 p.m./Computer Center PC Lab
Wednesdays
at Henry T's
Bar & Grill
Hot Wings
25¢ Hot Wings and $2.00 Domestic
Longnecks every Wednesday Night
Only at Henry T's.
Voted Lawrence's #1 Sports Bar
3520 West 6th Street 785-749-2999
All classes are held in the Computer Center located across from the Dole Center at Sunnyside and Illinois. Class schedule: Pick up a Driver's Ed. at the Computer Center or go to:
http://www.co.ukans.edu/macs/training/interest_desc.html
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ansan
Warm tomorrow with hazy sunshine.
Wednesday
July 15, 1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 • No. 157
HIGH LOW 93 71
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Vol. 108 • No. 157
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THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Alcohol task force reaches few answers
Community leaders discuss deterrents to underage drinking
By Duane Wagler
Kansan staff writer
The first joint city-university task force meeting on alcohol abuse prevention yielded two hours of discussion without decisions.
Provest David Shulenburger, task force chairman, said that Monday's
wide-ranging discussion without consensus was expected.
"We're just beginning to talk," he said. "I think that's all right."
Data on community alcohol abuse will be gathered, he said. Shulenburger said that Ron Olin, Lawrence chief of police, would gather reports on driving under the influence and data about alcohol-related accidents by location and severity.
Mike Wildgen, Lawrence city manager, said that more statistics on alcohol abuse would be of limited value. He said that it would be more helpful to
take attitudinal surveys about alcohol use and to have a panel discussion on fake IDs.
"We ought to get to the meat of the issue," Wildgen said.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the University of Kansas planned planned to conduct a random survey of undergraduate alcohol use and attitudes about it this fall.
Ambler said that a part of the survey would determine how common underage drinking was among students. The survey also would track patterns of abuse such as binge drinking.
"I think the only way people are going to learn is punishment."
Riley Scott
Student council president of Lawrence Hiah School
Shulenburger said he had compiled possible solutions from the literature task-force members had been given. Included were enforcement of existing laws, creation of alternative laws, more severe punishments, better alcohol education and the creation of alternative activities for students.
Riley Scott, student council president of Lawrence High School, said that alternative activities were ineffective in curbing alcohol use.
"I think the only way people are going to learn is punishment," he said. Kevin Yoder, student body president, said that it was important to acknowledge that students would find ways to drink.
Yoder said that more funding for programs like Saferide would be a good idea.
"There are so many different areas where people are violating the law," he said.
Saferide expands sober driver program
Shulenburger said that the task force would have its next meeting on Aug. 31.
By Liz Wristen
Kansan staff writer
Students who have had too much to drink will be asked to hand the keys to someone sober this fall.
The focus of the new program, an extension of Saferide, is to encourage students to designate a sober driver before going out.
"By expanding Saferide and focusing on a sober-driver program, we are hoping to focus on the safety initiative," said Kevin Yoder, student body president. "Through the expansion of Saferide, we are hoping to set up an ad campaign that would remind students of Saferide. This is set up in conjunction with the sober driver program."
Many Lawrence establishments have been asked to participate. Their participation will include offering free sodas to designated drivers and publicizing program awareness. Twelve establishments have already agreed to endorse the program.
"With the number of accidents that have occurred in the past six months, there has been mounting concern for safety," said Nicole Skalla, transportation coordinator for KU on Wheels.
Cups and coasters with program information will be used at participating establishments. Books of matches also will be available at restaurants that will remind students of safe transportation.
Anyone with questions or concerns may contact Skalla at 864-4644.
The program will be funded by the Division of Traffic Safety for the Kansas Department of Transportation. The department will supply the cups, coasters and other materials for promotional use. Money from the University of Kansas transportation budget will be used to make informational fliers publicizing the designated driver program and Saferide.
Skalla said she hoped the promotional materials would encourage intoxicated students to use Saferide if they do not have a designated driver.
"The more awareness that students have, the more people will respond to these programs," Skalla said. "There has been an increase in the awareness, and students are realizing that there are more options they can choose from other than driving themselves."
The fairs will provide brochures and filers, as well as key chains with the program's logo, Skalla said. Students also may participate in a question-and-answer session where prizes will be given to students who can correctly answer questions taken from the brochures.
Senate studied a similar program at the University of Missouri-Columbia to establish the same concept at the University. Their program, Creatively Helping to Establish an Educated and Responsible Society, or CHERS, is funded by the Department of Public Safety Division of Highway Safety.
Information about the designated driver program and Saferide will be available throughout Hawk Week, Aug. 15 to 23. Information fairs will be Aug. 18 from 7 to 9 p.m. on the Strong Hall lawn, Aug. 19 from 4:30 to 7 p.m. on Daisy Hill and Aug. 21 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Kansas Union
Stained glass window vandalized
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
Jeff Kuykendall went to work Sunday but instead of repairing a damaged window, he had to talk to police about vandalism.
Kuykendall, a glass blower for the Phoenix Gallery, 919 Massachusetts St., arrived at Smith Hall around a.m. Sunday to repair a stained glass window damaged by vandals last April. Kuykendall said he noticed more damage to one of the window's panels and taunting graffiti. Kuykendall said he immediately reported the incident to police.
He said he found a half of a concrete cinder block on the ground outside the window. Kuykendall said he assumed that the block had been thrown at the top panels and then fallen outside. Still, Kuykendall said he was curious how the perpetrators did it.
"The part that is amazing to me is throwing something that high and hard
The image shows a person kneeling and working on a large sheet of material. The individual appears to be either inspecting the fabric or preparing it for use, possibly in an art project or craft activity. The setting is indoors, likely within a workshop or studio space. The focus is on the hands and arms of the person, indicating active engagement with the task at hand. There are no discernible texts or labels that provide additional context about the location or the purpose of the work.
1000
Jeff Kuykendall, a glass blower working for the Phoenix Gallery, scrubs dirt and residue off a panel from the Smith Hall "Burning Bush" stained glass window. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
enough to break through the window," Kuykendall said.
Tony Augusto, representative for the KU Office of Public Safety, said an estimated $1,800 in damage was done to both the stained glass window pane and the plate glass in front of it. Augusto said that the incident occurred between 3:15 p.m. Saturday and 8:30 a.m. Sunday.
Augusto said that the KU Office of Public Safety was handling the investigation. He said that no information on suspects or motives was available, but that citizens with information or leads could call KU Crime Stoppers (864-TIPS). A $500 reward is being offered for information on the initial incident. A dollar amount for the second incident has not been set.
Marion O'Dwyer, owner of the Phoenix Gallery, said her company was hired by the owners of the building and the Friends of the Department of Religious Studies, to restore and to repair damage from the first incident. The window has been in place since 1966.
"We've already taken on the original repairs, so we'll just have to add this on to our work schedule." ODwer said.
The stained glass window in Smith Hall was damaged last Sunday for a second time by vandals, just as the initial damage was to be repaired. The hole in the window is in the second panel from the right. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
Kuykendall said he began work on the window Friday and had removed all the panels except the top row. He said they planned to replace the plate glass with safety glass in order to provide more protection for the window in the future.
Kuykendall said that although this new damage was less severe, it could add a week to the repair time because of the difficulty of removing the top windows. He said the original repairs were scheduled to take take two to three weeks. The original damage that occurred in early April, also involving a concrete block, was estimated at $1,700.
Kuykendall said he also found a message written in red lipstick on the window just above the cinder block that read, Too Bad. Dream on. (Expletive).
Kuykendall said he suspected that the message was directed at the restoration efforts and the that the vandalism was prompted by a Lawrence Journal-World article Saturday detailing their efforts. But Kuykendall said he would not let it
oother him.
"Whoever this is seems to be really determined to impress upon us that they are not going allow this window to be repaired," Kuykendall said. "But I am not going to take it personally. I wouldn't give them that satisfaction."
O'Dwyer said that she has repaired many stained glass windows, but rarely because of vandalism.
"It's always a shame when people have to express themselves violently," O'Dwyer said.
University libraries to move materials
By Elissa Harris Kansan staff writer
Three will relocate 300,000 less-used books,dissertations
If the University libraries could tell you about their troubles, you would get an earful about overcrowding. But relief is coming.
Beginning next month, about 300,000 materials will be moved from Watson, Murphy Art and Architecture and Spahr Engineering Libraries to the first floor of
Anschutz Science Library.
The move should begin during the first week of August, said Kent Miller, library facilities manager. It is likely to continue through the fall semester.
Maintaining good service depends on good organization. The libraries' staff members will inform each other every day about the location of materials, said William Crowe, vice chancellor for information services and dean of libraries.
Watson will be moving about 185,000 materials, most of which have not been checked out since 1979. Moving these books, journals and dissertations should provide space for new acquisitions during the next four years, Crowe said.
He said that University libraries
acquired two miles of materials every year.
"Moving the materials will be like passing an egg from one hand to another," Crowe said.
The materials being moved include older works of bibliography, library science, journalism, philosophy, psychology, religion, social sciences, language, anthropology, management, printing, railroads, theater and recreation.
Online materials will not relieve the libraries' needs for more space, Crowe said. It will be a long time before people are not dependent on printed materials, he added.
To fight the crunch for space, Murphy Art and Architecture Library has been installing compact shelving.
"We were one of the libraries that had reached almost 100 percent capacity," said Susan Craig, art and architecture librarian.
The art library is moving its least-used materials, Craig said. These include dissertations and theses written by KU students in the departments of art history, art, design and architecture and pre-1900 art-auction catalogs. Craig estimates the move will provide three or four years of growth space.
Sphar Engineering Library will move part of its dissertation collection.
The Senate Library Committee will begin making preparations this fall for another move in 2002.
More information on the move can be found at http://www.lib.ukans.edu.
---
2A
The Inside Front
Wednesday July 15,1998
News
from campus, the city and the nation
WASHINGTON LAWRENCE
The windshields of four cars were broken during the weekend in campus parking lots.
Some students at the Midwestern Music Camp
On CAMPUS:
Some students at the Midwestern Music Camp were caught with alcoholic beverages.
The University received a $60,000 grant from the Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Almost no new information has been released about the break in of a house at 804 Murrow Ct. In the NATION:
WASHINGTON: Special prosecutor Kenneth Starr has subpoenaed a top white house secret service agent.
CORRECTION
Because of a reporter's error, in the July 8 issue of The University Daily Kansan, a woman was misidentified in a story about the Benjamin Family Holocaust Research Project. Susan Futrell's great aunt Else Elumenseld was misidentified as Anna. Also, Futrell was misquoted in the story. Futrell said that she was not in correspondence with the president of Israel, but with a cousin in Israel.
ON CAMPUS
A cultural awareness celebration will be held by the Health Care Pathways office at 7 p.m. tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact Greg Frost at 864-4353 for additional information.
CAMPUS
Weekend car-windshield vandalisms investigated
Four automobiles were vandalized this weekend in University of Kansas parking lots
The windshields of four cars were broken by an unknown individual or individuals between 10:30 p.m. Friday and 12:50 p.m. Saturday, the KU Office of Public Safety said.
A facilities operations motor-pool-department vehicle was the first car found to have a broken windshield. It was parked in the lot in front of Hashinger Hall. The car's intended driver notified the KU Office of Public Safety and an officer was dispatched.
After the KU police officer arrived at the scene, he discovered broken windshields on a Louisburg woman's car and a Pt. Collins, Colo. man's car in the same parking lot.
A Lawrence resident's car windshield was found to be broken less than a block away in the parking lot in front of Ellsworth and McCollum halls.
KU police officer Tony Agusto said that the crimes still were being investigated by University police and declined to say whether any suspects had been identified.
Music campers found with alcohol, marijuana
Five teen-age participants in the Midwestern Music Camp allegedly possessed alcoholic beverages and one teen-ager allegedly possessed drug paraphernalia July 6 at Hashing Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said.
One 15-year-old male and four females aged 14 to 17 were found to be in possession of an alcoholic beverage in Hashinger Hall by residence-hall staff members at 9:30 p.m. last Monday, police said.
Upon further investigation, two marijuana pipes were found in the male suspect's residence hall room, police said.
The alcoholic beverage and marijuana pipes were confiscated and placed into evidence by the KU Office of Public Safety.
Sgt. Troy Mailen said that campus police completed reports and referred the cases to the Douglas County district attorney. Because several of the teens involved are not Kansas residents, criminal charges remain uncertain.
"Apparently, the male suspect purchased the alcohol and then distributed it to the females in 1/5 portions." Mailen said.
Mailen said that parents of the teens were notified by camp officials and that the teens then were released from the camp. University of Kansas police were called to the camp again on Saturday night when a 16-year-old female returned to Hashinger Hall intoxicated, apparently returning from a house party in Lawrence.
—Jerry Jackson
KU public-administration receives housing grant
The University of Kansas will receive a $60,000 grant from the Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development for a community development work-study program
The department of public administration will receive the grant this fall, said Marion Goodell, administrative director of the
department of public administration.
Goodell said that the grant would be dispersed to three minority public-administration graduate students who are members of low-income families.
Goodell said that the students would receive up to $5,000 a year for tuition and would receive a stipend for internships in a city or county manager's office located within an hour of Lawrence.
The grant enables valuable work experience. Goodell said.
"It provides opportunities to women and minorities for public service," she said.
The department has received the HUD grant clearout number 1993
grant almost every year since 1983. The grant is part of $3.6 million in HUD grants that will be dispersed primarily to colleges and universities, according to a Friday press release from HUD.
—Duane Wagler
Few details available in armed home invasion
LAWRENCE
Lawrence police have released little new information regarding the July 7 home invasion at 804 Murrow Court.
At 10:08 p.m., Lawrence police responded to a call from a resident of the house, who said that one or two armed men had entered his home, Sgt. Mark Warren said.
Officer Matt Sarna said that the suspects, two white males, left the house before police arrived. The suspects, who are wanted for home invasion and aggravated robbery, have not been identified.
Police arrested one of the residents of the house that night.
Sarma said he could not say whether drugs were involved in the home invasion.
The man, a 20 year-old Lawrence resident, was arrested on one count of LSD possession with intent to distribute.
"It could be a result of a dispute between acquaintances," he said. "It's a pretty
complex investigation."
—Ronnie Wachter
Sama said that something was stolen from the house but could not be more specific.
“There’s just a lot of stuff they can’t release right now.” Sama said.
NATION
Justice appeals ruling on agents' testimony
WASHINGTON — In a maneuver that could delay any Secret Service testimony in the Monica Lewinsky investigation, the Justice Department yesterday appealed a court decision that compelled officers who guard the president to testify before a grand jury.
The grand jury is investigating whether Clinton and former White House intom Nicaia Lewinsky lied under oath about having a sexual relationship and whether Clinton and others tried to obstruct the investigation.
Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr is seeking testimony from two uniformed Secret Service officers and an agency lawyer about what they or others learned while guarding Clinton.
In its appeal to the 11-member U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, the Justice Department argued that a president who could not trust his body guards would jeopardize his safety by keeping them at a distance. This argument failed to sway a three-judge appellate panel and a lower court judge.
If the full appeals court does not rehear the case, the Justice Department could ask the Supreme Court to consider it. The high court does not return from its summer recess until October.
Meanwhile, a government official speaking on condition of anonymity said Starr had subpoenaed the Secret Service for records that would detail President Clinton's activities and whereabouts at night on numerous dates between 1995 and 1997. CBS News first reported the request.
-The Associated Pres
ON THE RECORD
A student was found in possession of a stolen yellow parking permit at 5:45 p.m. July 6 in the Continuing Education building parking lot, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The permit was valued at $75.
An 18-year-old Lawrence woman and a 17-year-old Lawrence woman were arrested for transporting an open container at 1:53 a.m. Friday at Stratford and West Campus roads, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The 18-year-old also was cited for failure to yield the right of way.
A Wescoe Hall staff member's sport-coat and four opera records were stolen from his office at 8:15 a.m. Saturday, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $400.
A female student was arrested for operating a vehicle under the influence at 2:50 a.m. Sunday at 1402 W. 21st Terrace, the KU Office of Public Safety said.
Lawrence resident and an Overland Park resident were arrested for transporting an open container at 3:15 a.m. Sunday at 11th and Mississippi streets.
A stained-glass window and a clear glass window were broken between 3:15 p.m. Saturday and 8:30 a.m. Sunday in Smith Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The damage was estimated at $1,800.
A Council Bluffs, Iowa woman's cash and calling card were stolen from her purse at noon Friday in McCollum Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The loss was valued at $130.
- The rear window and one of the rear tail lights of a KU student's car were smashed between 11:30 a.m. June 30 and 6 a.m. July 1 in the 4700 block of Wimbledon Drive, Lawrence police said The damage was estimated at $400.
A KU student's antler-handled buck knife, hiking boots and 26 other items were stolen at 11:15 a.m. July 5 in the 1100 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $990.
A KU student's cellular phone was stolen between 6 and 9 p.m. Saturday in the 100 block of Windsor Place, Lawrence police said. The item was valued at $250.
A KU student's leather trifold wallet,
KUID card and five other items were
stolen between 2:30 and 3:30 p.m.
June 11 in the 3200 block of Mesa
Way. The items were valued at $80.
- The windshield of a KU student's car was smashed between 12:01 and 10 a.m. July 7 in the 1500 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $150.
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 Kansas (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.
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https://www.kansan.com/news/sports
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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 Staffer-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 UDIK 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.
Kansan staff
Gwen Olson ... Editor
Ann Premer ... Managing editor
Tom Eblen. General manager, news adviser
Ashley Bonner ... Business manager
Nicole Lauderdale ... Retail sales manager
Dan Simon ... Sales and marketing advisor
Justin Knapp ... Technology coordinator
News editors
Stephanie Hamby ... Design
Mark Bradshaw ... Graphics
Micki Jones ... Copy Chief
Juan Heath ... Online
Lizz Weber ... Photo
Advertising managers
Stacia Williams . . . . . . . . Special sections
Brandi Byram . . . Regional/ Campus/ Intern
Tenley Lane . . . . . . . Classified
K.C. Conover . . . . . . Creative Director
Brian Allers . . . . . . Zone
Shauntae Blue . . . . . . Zone
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 columnss 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 Gwen Olson (gowen@kansan.com) or Ann Premer (apremere@kansan.com) at 864-4810. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the page staff (editor@kansan.com) or call 864-4810.
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Wednesday, July 15, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 3
Soda shortage reported
Empty machines drive students to other drinks
By Vanessa Whiteside
Kansan staff writer
Although the slogan claims, "Whenever there is fun, there's always Coca-Cola," thirsty University of Kansas students and faculty might disagree.
Patrons of Coca-Cola vending machines in University buildings such as Robinson Center often find the machines inadequately stocked or completely empty.
Vishal Patel, Lawrence senior, recently attempted to contact Coca-Cola to notify it of the shortages. He reached the company's answering service.
"If you can get a Coke in Robinson, then you've won the lottery," Patel said. "It wouldn't be so bad if they would keep the machines full."
Patel said that the company should realize soda buying increased during the summer months.
"Coca-Cola needs to stop monkeying around and continue to provide us with their product," he said.
Coca-Cola
CLASSIC
Kevin Morris, a representative of Coca-Cola Mid-America, said that the company was working toward an immediate soluti
"We are in the process of making some adjustments and concentrating on future inventory issues," Morris said. "We want machines fully stocked for those on the University of Kansas campus."
Morris said that Coca-Cola was introduced to campus last fall and that adapting to machine usage was a gradual process.
"We don't have last year's summer history to base this off of so it's a learning process for us all," he said.
Morris said that stockers replenished the machines four to five days a week.
Debbie Shirar, Robinson Center security guard, said she had spoken to Coca-Cola stockers about the machines being emptied.
"I even caught the guy who was filling the machines and let him know that they were really missing out on beaucoup bucks because of all of the summer campers that are always trying to get something to drink," she said. "Now people are starting to bring Gatorade."
Coca-Cola can be contacted at 864-COKE or through the Coca-
Cola consumer information hot line at 1-800-438-2653.
City commission approves program to plan bike paths
Last night, the Lawrence City Commission:
Adopted a program suggesting plans for road construction and maintenance, the formation of pedestrian and bike paths and state assistance for public transportation. Members of the University of Kansas Student Senate, Citizens for Public Transportation, KU Environs and the Action Alliance have been asked to participate in committee meetings with the city's planning department.
- Received amendments to the city's environmental code and heard public comment. Amendments include increasing fines up to $100 a day for violations detrimental to the structure or residential aesthetics of a neighborhood—including the unlawful
accumulation of furniture such as couches, televisions, bicycles, lawn mowers, motor vehicles and general personal property on yards or porches. Lynn Goodell, director of Housing and Neighborhood Development, said that although the city had been lenient in past years, the time had come to stand firm against residential violations to preserve the houses and avoid demolition by neglect.
City Commission
Approved the sale, consumption and possession of alcohol in Burcham Park on July 18, 1998.
Discussed changing fireworks
standards for the proposed City Fire Code. In response to a deck fire at 1310 Kentucky St., Commissioner John Nalbandian requested commission direction to the Fire Code Board of Appeals. The fire was caused by a bottle rocket—which is an illegal firework—and occurred after the three-day holiday allowance of legal fireworks. Although the commission heard requests to ban all fireworks within the city limits, they voted unanimously not to ban legal fireworks during the three-day July 4 holiday.
"I find it ironic that we are considering removing liberty from a holiday that celebrates our own liberty," said Commissioner Bob Moody.
—Jenny Oakson
Archeologist presents his work
Kansan staff writer
By Mariana Paiva
When one thinks of an archeologist, images of dinosaur bones, tools, deserts and characters such as Indiana Jones come to mind.
Archeologist and art history professor William Hellmuth discussed the latest technology and techniques in archeology Friday at the University of Kansas.
An audience of 35 people attended his slide presentation at room 211, Spencer Museum of Art. They had the opportunity to see part of his archive of more than 50,000 color transparencies.
Hellmuth is the director of the Foundation for Latin American Anthropological Research, an institute dedicated to educating people about pre-Columbian art.
He said the institute was sponsored by several companies that
provided free cameras, printers and scanners. The equipment value of the institution surpasses $2 million.
Oversize laser printers allow Hellmuth to print roll-out pictures. Through this process, he can make a print of a three-dimensional object that shows all sides at once.
Although he works with the newest photographic technology, Hellmuth has never taken formal classes.
"That is why companies are coming to us," said Hellmuth. "We are showing them what their equipment is able to do."
"I learned everything I know by reading and experimenting." Hellmuth said. "A photographer would register them different than me, but I want to get as close as possible to enhance all the details of the artifact."
John Hoopes, acting director of anthropology department, invited Hellmuth.
He said that Hellmuth's work emphasized how digital photography can help teaching and learning.
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"He also realized that objects can be scanned," Hellmuth said. "Instead of taking pictures and depending on light, you can put objects in the scan and have three dimensional pictures to be studied. It sounds simple, but I have never thought about it before."
More information about Hellmuth and his work can be found at four different web sites:
http://www.maya-art-books.org;
http://www.maya-archeology.org;
http:// www w d i g i t a l p h o t o g r aphy. org;
http://www.cameras-scanner-flaar.org.
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The University of Kansas
Kansas Summer Theatre '98 Don't miss this magical romantic fairy tale!
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Directed by John Staniunas
Scenic & Costume Design by Dennis Christilles
Lighting Design by Ann Hockenberry-Hause
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
July 16,18,24,25,1998
All performances are at 8:00 p.m in the Crafton Preyer Theatre For mature audiences.
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box offices. Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-3477.
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both VISA and MasterCard are accepted
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3 Reasons Why You Should Buy a Parking Permit Now:
1. The sticker will look great on your rear window.
一
2. You'll avoid getting tickets while finishing up enrollment or buying your books.
3. You'll beat the lines for buying a permit in August.
KU Parking Department 864-PARK
HAPPY BIRDY DAY!
-
Section A · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 15, 1998
EVERYTHING BUTICE BEDS·DESKS·BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS unclaimed freight & damaged merchandise 936 Mass.
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Business school aims for top 10
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Kansan staff writer
International Contemporary Furniture with a Future!
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Associate Dean Bruce Bublitz played a role in the development of the plan.
With the addition of the new Plan For Excellence, a vision and goal setting plan, the school hopes to join the ranks of the top 10 public business schools in the country.
The plan was drafted by several committees consisting of faculty, alumni and business community executives. It serves graduate students, the business community, recruiting companies and other stockholders the school supports.
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"If you remain complacent,
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to 27 for undergraduates and an average GMAT score of 620 for graduate students
Jim Krause, Shawnee sophomore, plans to apply to the school next year.
- Produce high-quality graduates
"I'm looking forward to applying to the school of business, especially if they're trying to improve certain areas of the school and make it one of the top 10 in the nation." Krause said.
-Recruit and retain high-quality students
*Improve alumni survey results 2,6 and 10 years after graduation
The plan, to be implemented over a seven-year period, has a price tag of $2.1 million in incremental annual costs — a 21 percent increase in the school's annual budget. Resources to cushion the cost of the Plan will hopefully come from increased state funding, significant corporate grants, new student fees and additional private support.
*Increase the average starting salary for undergraduates from $27,800 ('95-'96) to $32,300 and for MBA's starting at $37,700 ('95-'96) to $59,100
*Guarantee that 80 percent of faculty achieve a minimum of highly satisfactory evaluation rating in both teaching, research and service.
For Excellence is risky and a challenge. It's going to be hard, but it's doable." Bublitz said.
The objectives of the plan are to:
*Provide all graduates with high potential career opportunities
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- Select, develop and retain high quality faculty
OBJECTIVES OF THE PLAN
*Create and maintain an out-
standing learning environment.
*Produce more refereed articles per faculty per year and
DANISH INSPIRATIONS
- Develop and maintain a learning environment comparable to top 10 public business schools.
Some of the goals of the plan include:
- Increase ACT scores from 24
Companies, students linked by Internet
By Sarah Morgan Kansan staff writer
The School of Engineering, the School of Business and the University Career Services Center are combining their online job programs this fall to help bring University students and companies that hire them closer together.
Kerri Millburne, School of Engineering Career Services recruiting coordinator, said the school uses a paper and pencil process where stud-
dents sign up for job interviews.
This fall, however, the schools and University Career Services Center, will combine databases and begin using Resume Expert, a web-based program that will enable students to do everything related to finding a job online.
"Right now, students have to use computers in their schools' career services office," said Lisa LeRoux-Smith, director of business and engineering career services.
Millburne said by using Resume
Millburne said job postings would be updated daily and Resume Expert would allow for privacy.
"Before, it was listed who had been selected for job interviews," Millburns said.
At some point, LeRoux-Smith said the School of Engineering, the School of Business and Career Services Center would like to offer the programs to companies to help them access interview schedules.
Millburne also said they would eventually like to be able to post information about the sessions companies hold.
The programs are not only for students enrolled in the School of Engineering or School of Business.
They are available for all students. LeRoux-Smith said that the cost would depend on how much the school the student is enrolled in charged.
60th Anniversary
KU
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Student Union Activities
University of Kansas
1938 - 1908
60th Anniversary
KU
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Student Union Activities
University of Kansas
1938 - 1998
TAKE A HIKE
Friday, July 17
6:30PM
Take a hike with SUA. Guided tour of Clinton Lake will begin at 6:30PM.
After the hike, we will build a bonfire, eat S'mores, and tell ghost stories.
Maps and more details available at the SUA Box Office. S'mores are provided.
SUA Box Office
785-864-3477
SUA Box Office
785-864-3477
Hiking
hiking trail
Kansan Classified
100s Announcements
115 On Campus
116 Announcements
117 Entertainment
118 Lost and Found
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
男 女
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
**sporting Goods**
325 Stereo Equipment
325 Auto Sales
345 Motorcycles for Sale
345 Miscellaneous
345 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
410 Condos for Sale
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Room Manted Want
405 Real Estate
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.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which
I
Telephone/In person
24 Hours
841-2345
100s Announcements
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, limitation"
F
Beds, Desks, Bookcases, Chester Drawers,
Everything But Ice, 193g Mass.
120 - Announcements
First Call For Help HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
男 女
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
BASS PLAYER WANTED for Top 40 private Beers, 79-364-394. $150 per night. Michael Beers, 79-364-394.
1111111111
Disable women 44 needs help for personal care,
some lifting required. Hours vary. $5.50/hr.
Drivers wanted, must be 21, clean driving record
Skilled hours. For interview at Lawrence Bus
Station.
Golf Course maintenance and equipment operator positions available immediately at Lawrence C. C. Apply in person at 400 Country Club Terrace.
Part time weekend/weekday staff position available at childrens museum in Shawnee KS. Call 913-365-4176 for more info and application.
Child Care Center looking for teachers aids. Hrs. 7 a.m. 2 p.m. and 1-4 p.m. Experience in child care helpful. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan EOE
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
205 - Help Wanted
---
Superstar cook wanted. Broiler. Saute expert-
ship. Marmalade. Benefits of benefits.
& Metcalf. Call (913) 642-8070
Experienced lead teacher for 2 yr. old classroom.
Degree preferred. Apply with resume and references at Children's Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan, EOE
Need IN-HOME SITTER in the evenings; 10pm-
8am. Free room and board PLUS CASH. Must
have references. If interested, please call 542-2951
after 2p.m. Available now.
Part-time nanny needed for 20 mo. old twins, in our home. Experience w/toddlers required, beginng August 18th, 8-5 M, W, F. Willing to consider 2 part-time persons, contact Diane at 843-6638.
Servers needed? Day or night, and part time positions available. Apply in person at KU's favoritebrew pub, Mill Creek Brewery in Westport, 4050 Pennsylvania, KCMO.
The Granada is looking for interested lighting
interns for dance nights and concerts for the fall.
Training to begin immediately. Please contact
Jenne or Scott at 842-1390.
Permanent Part-Time position available at family owned business in DeSoto, 3-2 days per week, & Saturdays, one-half day. Sales & some clerical. To apply, call 913-858-3748
Therapist needed for eleven year old boy with Autism. Must like children and be willing to learn applied behavior analysis procedures. Training provided. Please call Selma (816) 381-3914.
205 - Help Wanted
Community Works Inc. is currently hiring personal assistors for day, evening, weekend, and overnight to work with people who need head injury,
envenience openings. Call (913) 734-8867 ext. 30.
*envenience openings.* Call (913) 734-8867 ext. 30.
Experience the Orient and earn $$. Montessori
Experience, Taiwan, seeking school teachers for
children in China, not included. Resume:
Box 1388, Lawrence, KS 60044. Fax 785-943-4727
Chircury@mdsusa.net
Pipeline Productions, the area's finest concert promotion company is looking for interns for the job. If you like to music, enjoy working hard, have a passion for getting into the industry, call Kelly at 749-8555.
Christian family seeking Mary Poppins for 3 great girls age 5, 8, and 11 y.o. Aug 31-59.
Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. FRIDAYS
Become an instructor in between semesters. Must be non-smoker, hot transportation, and enjoy swimming. Contact Debbie at 311-0033.
DISABLED STUDENTS
If you are experiencing problems receiving needed, effective accommodations at KU (e.g. 642-3882). Sharing your experiences may help you connect to the call. System at 8-noon or 6-10 p.m.
CAMPUS MINISTRY POSITIONS
Programming and Student Assistant Assistant with University Campus Ministry at the University of Kansas. Paid position for persons interested in college education with college students. Contact Rev. Jay Henderson at 841-8613.
Kansan Ads Pay
Wednesday, July 15. 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 5
Talk attracts Trekkies
Klingon expert goes where few linguists have gone before
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
Kap· la! Kap· la! The sounds of students, writers and Star Trek fans practicing their Klingon filled the Pine Room of the Kansas Union last Thursday.
About 50 people gathered to hear Lawrence Schoen, director of the Klingon Language Institute, discuss the intricacies of Klingon and other alien languages and how they can be used to improve science-fiction writing.
Schoen's talk was part of the annual Writers Workshop in Science Fiction, sponsored by the J. Wayne and Elsie M. Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction at the University of Kansas. The conference, which Schoen attended, was held from June 28 to July 10.
Schoen discussed making alien languages more realistic and exotic in science-fiction writing and gave lessons in Klingon, which he said was his favorite alien language.
The artificial language, created for Paramount Pictures' Star
Trek movies and television series, has spawned The Klingon Language Institute, located near Philadelphia.
With more than 1,600 members in 45 countries, the institute has become a popular leisure and academic organization. The institute publishes its own quarterly academic journal and has translated the Bible and Hamlet into Klingon.
Schoen said that critics who charged that his institute was not a serious academic endeavor were too narrow-minded to see the benefits of studying artificial languages.
"I think that anything can be pursued with academic rigor," Schoen said. "Studying even an artificial language has a great deal of utility because it gives you insight into language in the larger sense."
Schoen said that Klingon study attracted many people to foreign-language study who otherwise would be uninterested.
Many young Trekkies in the audience eagerly awaited Schoen's lessons on the Klingon alphabet. However, Schoen focused on teaching science fiction writers how linguistic rules such as syntax and phonology can be manipulated to create strange yet realistic aliens.
"Communication is so difficult among our own kind. It shouldn't be any easier between us and aliens," Schoen said.
occurrence of aliens speaking in English was unrealistic.
Kevin Wohler, a writer and Topeka resident, said that he came to the talk to improve his science fiction writing, and that it was very helpful.
"When he was talking about the different parts of semantics, I thought there was a lot there that you can play with and add to your writing," Wohler said. "If I can incorporate just one of these ideas about communication problems into a story, it's going to add something."
Schoen said the science-fiction
James Gunn, professor emeritus of English and conference director, said that Schoen's talk was a rare treat because his specialty in the Star Trek language interested the general public yet related to the conference's mission of improving science fiction writing.
"Science fiction attempts to represent the world of science fiction accurately. And part of that world are alien beings," Gunn said. "Anyone who wants to write science fiction ought to know as much as possible about the way creatures communicate so that they can project in their fiction a believable world."
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2. Dr. Doullite P-12
1. 150, 4.50, 7.30, 9.30
3. X-Files P-12
1. 15.1, 4.30, 7.95, 9.45
4. Armadagem PD-12 *The Fame* P-12
1. — 4.00, 7.15 —
2. Lethal Weapon 4 **B** *The Fame* P-12
1. — 4.10, 6.55, 9.25
3. Kerry's Something About Mary **B** *The Fame* P-12
1. — 4.15, 6.45, 9.15
2. Lethal Weapon **B** *The Fame* *2003* P-12
1. 1.55, 4.40, 7.25
2. Kerry's Something About Mary **B** *The Fame* P-12
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3. Armadagem PD-12 *The Fame* P-12
1. 1.65, 5.00 — 9.30
10 Out Of sight **B** *2013*
1. 1.10, 4.20, 7.90, 9.40
11 Mulan **G**
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12 Small Soldiers P-12
1. 1.00, 4.65, 6.40
Starting 7/17: "Mask of Zoro" with A. Banders & A. Hopkins
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2 Paasie $^{26}$ 1.55, 4.40 — —
alen. Dirty Work $^{27-28}$ — — 7.15, 9.30
3 My Giant $^{29}$ 2.00, 7.15, 9.30
4 City of Angels $^{30}$ 1.50, 4.30, 7.95
5 Lost in Space $^{31}$ 1.50, 4.30, 7.95
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Section A·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
VV
Wednesday, July 15, 1998
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The Urge shares anger, plays to young crowd
By Sindv Greenfield
Special to the Kansan
Even though the band, The Urge, says that its music is maturing, its audience is not.
Friday at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Mo., the St. Louisbased band, The Urge, shared lyrics of pain and experience with a mostly adolescent audience.
While The Urge's first self-titled album displayed more anger than their recently released Master of Styles, guitarist Jerry Jost claims said secluding themselves in Washington, Mo., helped the band to concentrate more on its melodies and, as a result, the band's music matured.
"We thought about writing songs," Jost said. "Maturity of music is a natural evolution."
Though the band and their unique ska, funk, punk style have matured, they still display anger in their music.
Steve Ewing, lead singer and writer, said that his lyrics on Master of Styles were a display of his soul.
"I feel like my whole self is laid out on plastic." Ewing said on the biography press release from The Urge's label, Epic Records. "There's nothing on there that isn't real, that doesn't mean something to me."
While Ewing revealed his pain in his melancholy lyrics, the hard core funk drives teens to listen.
"I know the lyrics," says 16-year-old Rachael Griffith of Dallas, who attended the half-full venue Friday. "It's the music I pay attention to. That's why I like them."
Steven Nardi, professor of psychology, said that the question of whether life imitated art or art imitated life came up when looking at whether music would influence adolescents.
"Artists give negative messages. It's a plausible hypothesis that some kids imitate it," Ilardi said. "There's already delusion and anger out there, so rather than shaping, they're expressing."
Therefore, the Urge's melancholic anger is only one style of expression, according to Ilardi's interpretation.
'Prelude to a Kiss' opens
Romantic comedy explores love story
By Mariana Paiva
Kansan staff writer
The ability to look at the world though another person's eyes and to prove that you deeply know who you love are two themes the play "Prelude to a Kiss" will depict this weekend.
This romantic comedy, written by Craig Lucas, will be performed tomorrow, Saturday and July 24 and 25 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The play opens with Rita and Peter falling in love at the first sight. Shortly after getting married, their promises of eternal love are tested.
After the wedding, an old man asks to kiss the bride, changing the life of the couple. Ultimately, the
audience is taken on a mystical ride of exchanged identities and the pure connection of souls.
"Prelude to a Kiss" premiered on Broadway in 1988 and was released as a film in 1992. John Staniunas, assistant professor of theater and film, directs this production as part of the University of Kansas Summer Theatre program.
Stanianas said issues like the fear of death, fear of life and relationships are important themes of the performance, as well as loving someone for more than his or her external appearance.
"This version reminds more the film than the Broadway show, but unlike the movie, Peter steps out and talks as a narrator," Stanianus said. "He helps us understand this fantastic story that would be hard to believe otherwise."
The main couple, Rita and Peter,
is played by Lauren Stanford, Stillwell senior, and Trey Hohman, a
1998 KU graduate.
"Peter stays the entire time on stage, so I had lots of lines to memorize," Hohman said. "It has been hard physically and psychologically, but I know I will be glad at the end for having interpreted him."
Dennis Christilles, scenic and costume designer, said he tried to create a subjective scenario to emphasize the fantastic meaning of the play. He used several walls with windows painted to reveal pieces of furniture as the characters moved from one scene to another.
"The windows are great metaphors. When you are looking through the window, you are never a part of what is going on in the other side," Christies said. "You are wishing to be part of the other."
Tickets for the Kansas Summer Production are available at KU box offices. All the performances are at 8 p.m. in Murphy Hall's Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
Norwegian fiddler to perform
By Darrin Poschka
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence will experience a bit of Norway culture when the Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., presents a concert of Norwegian traditional music at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow.
The concert will feature Leif Rygg from the Voss region in Western Norway. Rygg is famous throughout Norway as an accomplished player of the Hardanger fiddle.
He has won the Norwegian National Competition three times and also has released several albums.
Lawrence resident Byron Wiley, who is president of the Hardanger Fiddle Association of America, will accompany Rygg on his trip through Kansas.
Wiley, in his first year as president of the association, became interested in the fiddle in 1991 after reading an article about the fiddle.
He learned to play the Hardanger fiddle in 1983, after attending a Scandinavian dance and music camp.
"I would eventually like to become more competent on the fiddle." Wiley said. "Maybe somebody I will think about releasing a CD."
Wiley will travel with Rygg to
each concert to help describe and answer questions about the Hardanger fiddle.
Known in Norway as the harding-
kfele, the Hardanger fiddle is different from a normal fiddle in that it has eight strings, four of which are strung under the fingerboard and cannot be touched by the bow.
The four understrings resonate as the top four are played. The bowing style is very fluid, so as not to disturb the vibrations of the understrings. The player uses trills and sudden bow lifts as accents in the music.
THEATRE OF CITY STUDIO
Leif Rygg plays the Hardanger fiddle.
Contributed photo.
Wiley said that the Hardanger fiddle was named for the region in Norway where it originated. It is considered Norway's national instrument.
"Leif's music is a West Coast style," Wiley said. "His music is very refined."
Norwegian music styles vary from province to province. The reason for this, Wiley said, was that when the music style was born, travel between provinces was difficult, so each province created their own style of music.
Kelley said that the fiddle was
In an article in Fiddler Magazine, Loretta Kelley, former president of the fiddle association, described the folklore behind the Hardanger fiddle.
Fiddlers were often said to use their powers to cause a whiskey glass to dance across the table to them or to break the strings of an opponent in a fiddling contest, she said.
often connected to underworld forces, trolls and magic.
Anyone interested in learning more about the Hardanger fiddle is encouraged to attend Thursday's concert, Wiley said. The concert is free, and donations will be taken at the door.
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Lawrence Business
Local graduate markets furniture
HomeStyle
Larry Northrop, Lawrence graduate student and owner of HomeStyle, 844 Massachusetts St., sits in the store's front window, which he calls his office, and watches pedestrians. Northrop drew on his experiences as a college student in starting the business, which opened on July 4. HomeStyle is stocked with furniture recycled from hotels, such as couches, chairs and mattresses. Photo by Joseph Griffin/KANSAN.
By Michael Martin Kansan staff writer
Larry Northrop, Lawrence graduate student and local furniture entrepreneur, is well-traveled. So is his product.
Northeast's company, HomeStyle, 844 Massachusetts St. sells furniture recycled from upscale hotels, such as couches, chairs, mattresses and artwork.
Northrop, owner of the two-level, 8,000-square-foot store which opened on July 4, attended the University as an undergraduate and is enrolled in the M.B.A. program.
As a student, Northrop and his brother did maintenance work in local rental properties his father owned. They noticed the student lifestyle could take a heavy toll on furniture.
From that observation, HomeStyle was born. It was his brother's brainstorm. Northrop said.
"What students need is cheap furniture,' he said, and I agreed," Northrop said.
After Northrop returned to Lawrence after a one-year, 132-city world tour in 1996. HomeStyle began to take shape.
Connections that Northrop cultivated from his years as an account manager with Sprint paid off in starting the business. he said.
Northrop purchases furniture from an independent contracting firm that travels around the country remodeling hotels, he said. Most of HomeStyle's current stock once furnished a Marriott Courtyard hotel in Maryland. Acquiring furniture from a Ritz-Carlton and two Holiday Inn hotels is a possibility, Northrop said.
The furniture comes to him in good condition and does not need refurbishing,he said.
HomeStyle is stocked with sofa beds, lamps, chairs, artwork, mirrors, refrigerators, mattress sets and televisions. Sofa beds range from $110 to $155, regular sofas are $95, mattress sets start at $60, chairs are $20 and artwork ranges from $15 to $40.
The store delivers to Lawrence locations for $10. Delivery to other areas is negotiable.
Aaron Kabler, Lawrence senior, was HomeStyle's only employee until last week. He made deliveries and ran the store when Northrup was out.
"It was tiring,"Kabler said."Business has been pretty good even though we haven't done any advertising yet."
Northrup sells to businesses and nonprofit organizations as well as students. He expects business to increase when University students move back to Lawrence for the fall semester.
Sumy Lan, Lawrence resident, browsed through HomeStyle on a recent afternoon.
"It's pretty interesting," she said. Especially since it's a college-student town."
Northrop said that he considered launching his business in a much larger space in Kansas City, Mo., but that the prospect of a student audience was appealing.
"Lawrence isn't as big as Kansas City, but there's just as much market," he said.
Massachusetts Street's character also lured him back to his hometown, he said.
"I'm kind of at the corner of the world right here," he said, sitting at a table in the store's front window. "I like sitting in my office here and watching the world go by."
Home-decor boutique opens downtown
By Michael Martin
Kansan staff writer
Peggy Wright wants you to push the envelope of home decor.
If you would like,you can use one of her letter openers.
Wright, owner of Borderline, 820 Massachusetts St., recently opened the boutique that carries a wide variety of gift items and home accents, much of which are hand-crafted.
Functional art, she calls it.
"It's perfect for students graduating or setting up their first apartment," she said.
Borderline also stocks high-end pieces such as an African ebony-wood bowl and a wave-shaped glass bowl with a rock base from the Pacific Northwest, Wright said.
several gift ideas within a student's price range, she said. Many items are less than $10, such as letter openers and hand-turned wood pots.
The store has rattan armoires stocked with suede pillows and candles. Darkwood tables display silver jewelry, ebony stem glassware, silver bowls and decorative plates and lamps. Iron wall decorations and fabrics in exotic patterns line the
Peggy Wright
"I wanted to be in an urban, pedestrian environment. It was more suited to what I'm trying to do"
Several items for sale are on display at Borderline. According to the owner Peggy Wright, the store was 20 years in the making. Photo by Joseph Griffin/KANSAN.
Owner of Borderline
walls. A garden scene occupies a back corner.
"It's eclectic," Wright said. "There's maybe some ethnic and Oriental influence, but mostly it's a mixture of old with new."
Almost half of Borderline's merchandise is hand-crafted by artisans from regions such as Santa Fe, N.M., and the East Coast. Wright said.
Her goal is to supply homeowners and students with gifts for graduations, weddings and special events. The store offers
She discovered both items at an accessories show. Wright said she regularly canvasses the country in search of merchandise, visiting craft shows and art festivals in cities such as Atlanta and New York City.
Shirley Crooks, Kansas City, Mo., resident and Wright's sister, helped with the
"I thought it had a real artist's quality, like a gallery," she said. "I think we need more of that."
store's grand opening last Friday. She said that business had been strong.
Tobey Martin, St. Louis senior, visited Borderline shortly after its opening and said that the store complemented Lawrence well.
"We've had a really good response. I'm amazed at the amount of foot traffic. We don't have that in Kansas City." Crooks said.
Wright said that Borderline had been in
the making for a while.
"I've been in retail all my life," she said. "I always wanted to open my own business."
For more than two decades, Wright worked at upscale department stores, such as Halls and the now-defunct Woolf Brothers and Harzfeld's, on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo.
Wright still lives in the Brookside neighborhood of Kansas City, but said she had fallen in love with Lawrence.
"I think it's a bit more artsy, has more an eclectic mix of people," she said. "I wanted to be in an urban, pedestrian environment. It was more suited to what I'm trying to do."
Sidewalk sale to offer big bargains tomorrow
By Michael Martin Kansan staff writer
Bargain shoppers take note: hunting season begins at sun-up tomorrow.
The 27th Annual Downtown Lawrence Sidewalk Sale will bring thousands of shoppers and scores of local merchants to the sidewalks of Massachusetts Street.
"It's a huge day," McFarlane said. "We rank it right up there with holiday shopping."
More than 100 merchants, including all the stores in downtown Lawrence, will be open from 7 a.m. until sundown. The vendors will offer seasonal clearance merchandise discounted 50 to 70 percent, said Marcia McFarlane, administrator for Downtown Lawrence Inc.
A variety of nonprofit organizations will offer beverages from fund-raising booths, KLWN-FM will broadcast live and food, including Indian tacos and sausage, will be available to satisfy shoppers' non-material appetites.
DOWNTOWN
LAWRENCE
ESTABLISHED 1944
The Lawrence Farmers' Market, 10th and Ver m o n t streets, also will be open from 4 to 6 p.m.
The sale is sponsored by Downtown Lawrence Inc., a nonprofit coalition of
downtown merchants and has been held on the third Thursday in July since 1971. The event traditionally draws thousands, including many from out of town and from neighboring states, said Joe Flannery, president of Weavers Department Store Inc., 901 Massachusetts.
Weavers has participated in the sale for more than 30 years, before the event was official.
"We put out tables after tables on the sidewalk," Flannery said. "It's probably the most fun event of the year, because you're doing business outside, and you're doing business inside."
Flannery said the sale were not limited to Massachusetts Street, but spanned the city, including merchants from outlying areas such as 23rd Street.
"Almost everyone participates," he said. "It's a community-wide event."
For Sugartown, a recycled-clothing store at 918 Massachusetts, this year's sidewalk sale will be its first. Tamyra Heim, co-owner, said that the new business would offer the traditional discounts but would put its own spin on the event, for practicality's sake.
"Our sidewalk sale will be inside where it's cool." she said
Free parking will be available in parking lots along New Hampshire and Vermont streets. Parking also will be available in the city parking garage at the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza.
Natural remedies require caution
Bv Leslie Potter
Kansan staff writer
Varro E. Tyler, an herbal-medicine specialist, said that the most popular and effective natural medicines were echinacea, a treatment for the common cold; garlic, a high-cholesterol treatment; ginger biloba, an aid to memory and concentration; ginseng, an energy booster. St. John's wort, a treatment for mild to moderate depression; and kava, an anxiety-reduction aid.
Although they have been used since ancient times, herbal medicines have gained renewed interest in the United States. The trend comes from patients demanding herbal alternatives to synthetic drugs.
"Some herbal medicines such as ginseng and gingko seem very valid and are helpful for people," she said. "But you need to be careful."
However, natural remedies are not necessarily safe, said Myra L. Strother, a senior student health physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
the Food and Drug Administration, so you don't know what additives or other ingredients companies may put in them, and people don't usually know the right dosage to take." Strother said.
Linda L. Keeler, a senior student health physician at Counseling and Psychological Services, said that students should not take St. John's wort for depression without receiving therapy.
Strother said that herbal medicines could cause side effects or interact negatively with other medications.
Keeler said that few studies had been conducted on herbal medicines and their potential for side effects, which posed a problem because herbal medicines were sold over the counter.
"Herbal medicines are not regulated by
"Depression is complex," Keedor said.
"You need to be monitored by a physician. Depression just cannot be treated by medicine alone."
"There are studies under way to better understand how these medicines can help people," Keeler said. "But you should get an accurate diagnosis from a physician before starting any medication."
Project teaches computers, culture
By Beth Janes
Teams from 19 U.S. schools supported by the Bureau of Indian Affairs are in Lawrence for the 4 Directions Summer Institute at Haskell Indian Nations University.
Kansan staff writer
The institute's goal is for K-12 students to learn about their heritage while developing computer skills. It begins today and lasts for one and a half weeks.
Students use computers to collect, analyze and report on their local cultures, said Brian Newberry, 4 Directions coordinator. Participants will attend training sessions on Power Point, Web page development and the Internet.
Newberry said that the projects would help bring schools that were thousands of miles apart closer through shared information and common experiences.
"Although the cultures at the schools are each different, they experience similar problems, like a lack of money," he said. "This project has broadened horizons and is breaking down that isolation. It is individuals rather than schools making a personal connection during the institute. This is important because the project really is a collaborative effort."
The University of Kansas' main role in the 4 Directions project is to assist with the computer training. The Haskell faculty helps with curriculum development.
"The project isn't just teaching about technology," Newberry said. "It's about changing the structure of teaching and learning. We are bringing together a collaborative community of teachers to share ideas and support each other. We hope at the end, our efforts will go on through a virtual community of teachers."
The 4 Directions project began after President Clinton and the United States Department of Education issued a challenge grant to educators and businesses to create programs for using the information superhighway in education and everyday life. More than 500 groups responded with proposals. The 4 Directions project was one of 19 chosen and the only one involving Native Americans.
"There are many non-native teachers in
"Although the cultures at the schools are each different, they experience similar problems like a lack of money."
Brian Newberry 4 Directions Coordinator
Native American classrooms, and they often rely on community members to help develop the curriculum," Newberry said. "We collaborate and teach what the schools need to accomplish their project and reform curriculum."
Sherri Foreman teaches computer technology at the Muckleshoot Tribal School in Auburn, Wash. She said she liked the institute because there were fewer distractions when she was away from home.
/
4
"It gives us a chance to gather together and get the opportunity to learn skills and training," she said. "Once I get there, I can free up my mind and concentrate more on the project and the training."
2B
Quick Looks
Wednesday July 15, 1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (July 15)
You are stronger than usual this year and luckier. Set financial goals in July. Learn through experience in August. September is the best for buying real estate.
Aries (March 21-April 19) - Today is an 8. A friend's mistake can teach you a good lesson. Make sure you do not do the same silly thing yourself. Take your own sweet time making a decision involving your hard-earned money. A gamble probably will not pay off, but a calculated risk might.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is a 6.
You are strong, vigorous and good looking. Don't
expect to get everything you want without a fight,
however. If the other person wants the prize more
than you do, it may not be worth the effort. The work
you're doing now will pay off later.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is an 8.
Too bad there is work to be done. You are in the mood to play. So is your sweetheart, so do not worry. There will be plenty of time for that later. Meanwhile, make sure financial paperwork is filled out correctly.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is a 7. You could have a very productive meeting today. You and a bunch of your friends may come up with a way to make more money. It might be for a worthy cause, or it might be for yourselves. Start with an old-fashioned idea and add modern technology.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 5.
Do not expect to accomplish anything quickly. First you will have to consider all the consequences of your actions. Any you miss will be provided by a jury of your peers. Your friends may be critical now, but they can save you trouble later.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is a 6.
Your workload is intense all week long. Today, get some help from a distant friend. He or she may be able to provide something you need, so you do not have to do it all yourself. Do not be afraid to learn something that looks too difficult.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is an 8.
You may get help with a domestic problem that has been giving you fits. If money is tight, try trading. It is hard to keep your mind on business when you're so much in love. If this has not happened yet, watch out!
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 6.
Get a friend to fight on your side today. Apart, you do not stand much of a chance. Together, you can at least slow the competition. Your alliance is complicated by the fact that you and the friend don't always get along.
P
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is a 7. If you get the chance to do extra work today, take it. If you do not need the money now, you will soon. Something you want or already bought may cost more than you figured. You are good at fixing things. That will help a lot.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Today is a 6.
You may be plagued by self-doubt. But if things are not going the way you expected, it is probably not your fault. And there is something else you have not considered: These changes could turn out to be better for you in the long run.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) - Today is a 6.
Gaining a new skill could lead to a raise in pay. A friend can lead you in the right direction. Do not follow too close, though. Make modifications to fit your own needs. Take extra time with your homework tonight. It is tough, but it will be worth it.
P
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is an 8.
A new household appliance could be a good investment.
Once it is paid for, it will save maintenance costs.
Make sure you get one that will last long.
Meanwhile, ignore gossip from a bitter person. Find out the facts yourself by going to the source.
1 100
LION
Commercial to generate interest in football
30-second spot includes intense players, a kicker. a football-sized dog
Gymnastics
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be reaaf for entertainment purposes only.
By Jorry Jackson
Kansan staff writer
M
Crew members with Michael and Montgomery Production Company of Kansas City prepare for a scene in a commercial shot in front of Wescoe Hall. It was filmed Thursday for the KU Athletic department's 1998 football season advertising campaign. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
Lights, camera, action. An unusually large crowd of students littered the steps leading to Wescoe Hall Thursday morning as bicyclists rode between trees and a single football player ran through the crowd, knocking a stack of The University Daily Kansan out of a young man's hands.
Producer Terri Montgomery said the commercial, focusing on the University of Kansas 1998 football team, was envisioned by both Kansas City based agencies to promote the team and the intensity of the players.
Kansan staff writer
That was the first of four scenes of a commercial filmed for the KU Athletics Department by the Michael and Montgomery production company and the MMG Worldwide advertising agency.
Linebacker J.J. Johnson, Los Angeles senior; offensive lineman Dan Dercher, Mission senior; wide receiver Termaine Fulton, Topeka sophomore; and kicker Joe Garcia, Olathe sophomore, each had starring roles in the commercial. Montgomery and director Michael Dali also included several dozen students as extras to play, oddly enough, students.
Rick Mullen, director of KU athletic promotions, said that the department decided to create a new commercial to increase ticket sales for football.
"We want to get KU football out there to the people," Mullen said.
fish
He said the commercial cost about $25,000, which was paid for by the department's promotions budget. Mullen said he hoped that the commercial would hit the television stations in the Kansas City and Topeka markets by Aug. 1.
Scorpion
The commercial marked the first time that the Athletics Department has worked with a professional advertisement agency for football. Mullen said that because many people at MMG Worldwide were KU alumni, working with them was easy.
∅
"We have a core group of fans and alumni that live in those areas that we want to keep and build upon," Mullen said.
Brent Niemuth, creative director for MMG Worldwide, said that the firm had some innovative ideas for promoting the 1998 KU football season.
射箭
"We've tried to convince the Athletics Department to take a much edgier approach
to football advertising this year," he said.
Niemuth said that the commercial would consist of four scenes in a 30-second spot. covering four football players who never stop thinking about football.
"These guys are living and breathing football, making it a part of their lives, and we are asking the fans to do the same thing," Niemuth said.
The commercial's scenes will range from a wide receiver catching a falling vase in the Spencer Art Museum, to an unusual scene involving a field goal kicker and a small football-sized dog.
"We are trying to generate excitement for the '98 season," Niemuth said. "As long as we can do that, we'll have done our job."
SPORTS CALENDAR
Wednesday, July 15
6:30 p.m.
ESPN — Major League Baseball, New York Yankees at Detroit OR —Cleveland at Boston
ESPN2 Cycling, Tour de France, stage 4. (same-day tape)
9:30 p.m.
ESPN — Major League Baseball, Houston at Arizona OR — Tampa Bay at Anaheim
11:30 p.m.
ESPN — Cycling, Tour de France, stage 4. (delayed tape)
PUTTING IT TOGETHER
10
Melinda Houlihan, Olathe senior, and Bryan Bass, Topeka junior, prepare the new recycling bin in Stauffer-Flint Hall for use. Houlihan and Bass, of the University's recycling office, installed the bin Thursday and plan to install most of the bins by the end of the summer. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
CROSSING
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Thur. $1.00 pitchers
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Wed. $1.50 Domestic Schooners
Sat. $2.50 Schooners
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The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
BARTON 21 BARTON 17
Ray Bechard, new Kansas volleyball coach, gives his former team some advice during a game. Bechard coached volleyball and was the women's basketball assistant coach at Barton County Community College in Great Bend. Bechard helped his volleyball team to a record of 716-60 during his 13 years with the team. Contributed Photo
Volleyball coach scores position
Accident leads to collegiate coaching
By Melinda Weaver
Kansan staff writer
Becoming a volleyball coach might have been an accident, but first year KU coach Ray Bechard hopes to turn it into a success.
Bechard was born and raised in the small northwestern Kansas town of Grinnell, recognized only because it lies right off Interstate 70 on the way to Denver.
After graduating from high school, Bechard spent two years at Barton County Community College in Great Bend on his way to earning a degree in Health and Physical Education with a minor in journalism at Fort Hays State University.
"I was young and dumb." Bechard said. "I was hesitant to take the job, but I said I'd give it a shot."
He said that he got a little hooked. In fact, in his three years at Lewis, the volleyball team had more success than the basketball team.
"I think volleyball is a great way for "I female athletes to express themselves
physically." Bechard said.
After Lewis, Bechard was offered a job with his alma mater, Barton County, as the assistant women's basketball coach
After serving as assistant coach for two years, the head volleyball coach left, and the Barton County athletic director asked Bechard if he would take over the program. To this day, Bechard is not sure why.
"I had only been the head coach of a high school program for three years and been out of it for two," Bechard said. "Now, they wanted me to be a collegiate coach."
Bechard served as the volleyball head coach and assistant basketball coach for five years before deciding it was too much. The schedule was too difficult. He also was trying to raise two children, Ashley and Brennan now ages 15 and 11. In 1990, his basketball duties were removed. Bechard continued coaching volleyball until January 25 this year.
In 13 years under Bechard, the Barton County volleyball team went 716-60, including 13 conference championships and nine Final Four appearances at the National Championship.
During that stretch, his team had 126 consecutive home wins. He never lost at home.
"I think that was our biggest accomplishment," Bechard said. "If you look at volleyball, and the momentum involved, that's a great accomplishment."
When the University of Kansas called,
Bechard jumped at the opportunity.
"I have been a huge KU fan for forever and identified mostly with the athletics because that's what we saw on TV."
Beachard said. "I looked at opportunities, but I hoped this worked out. The people here are quality, and the athletic administrators do things the right way."
Beachard went through a formal interview process before he was hired.
"Obviously, the tremendous success he had in the past was a factor," Frederick said. "But most appealing were the recommendations we received from other coaches and people who had worked with him about the family atmosphere he created with his players and how they enjoyed playing for him."
Athletic director Bob Frederick said he liked what he saw.
After he was hired, Bechard spent five weeks training and practicing with his new team. He said that they got to know each other and he talked about where he wanted the program to go, on and off the court.
He said that he noticed a lot of anxiety and frustration.
"Anytime you aren't winning as many as you like, a certain frustration develops," Bechard said. "But this season is going to be different from the past. We only have to take responsibility for this season and on."
The team faces a Big 12 Conference that looks to be the toughest conference in the country, with two top four teams, Texas and Nebraska, and another top 10 team, Colorado.
"If you're not ready to go, they'll eat you up," Bechard said.
The team's first game is September 4 at West Michigan University. Including the Jayhawk Invitational, the team will play 13 home games.
Roy Williams to join board for coaches
By Melinda Weaver
Kansan staff writer
Jayhawk basketball coach Roy Williams will serve on the John R. Wooden Award board of governors with some of the nation's most renowned coaches.
The John Wooden Award is presented annually to the nation's top collegiate basketball player. The award is basketball's equivalent to football's Heisman Trophy.
The selected coaches have directed programs that have consistently won league and national titles and have made appearances in the Final Four. They have coached players involved with the award program during the past 22 years.
PETER TROSTER
The board of governors will assist the Wooden Award staff to ensure the award's criteria continues to include academics and off-court behavior.
Williams: named a member of the John Wooden Award Board of Governors.
Dean Buchan, director of sports information, said that John Wooden, who is in his 80s, created the board to ensure the award would continue to be a prestigious award of integrity after his death.
John Wooden of UCLA will serve as chairman and Dean Smith of North Carolina will be vice chairman.
The other members are Jim Boeheim, Syracuse; Jim Calhoun, Connecticut; Denny Crum, Louisville; Clem Haskins, Minnesota; Gene Keady, Purdue; Mike Krzyzewski, Duke; Rick Majerus, Utah; Mike Montgomery, Stanford; Lute Olson, Arizona; and Orlando "Tubby" Smith, Kentucky.
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7
Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 15, 1998
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Student's time in Pakistan helps her see value of family
Commentary
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Surprisingly this summer has been a fresher breath of air. My
In my seventh week in Pakistan, a tinge of homesickness has caught up with me. I knew from the beginning that I would miss my friends, my lifestyle and late-night runs to Java Break. But immersion in Pakistani society has triggered an unexpected nostalgia for my family.
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While away from Lawrence, academics and my college compadres, I have realized how caught up in ourselves we become during our college years. We embrace the freedom and independence that college life offers — plunging headfirst into personal ambitions, drunken anathy or a combination of both.
My first year of college felt ideal after spending four years at a rural high school in Topeka. Lawrence seemed hopping with its 20,000 college students, and it was easy to fashion my own little world at the University of Kansas. Escaping the restrictions of home was a breath of fresh air.
--dinner table or in front of the television. Needless to say, these qualities are becoming increasingly rare in the average American household.
time here has reopened my eyes to the other people in my life.
For the past two months I have been exposed to intense family values. My uncle, aunt and four college-aged cousins in Islamabad live a traditional, hearty life family
Nadia
Mustafa
editor@kansan.com
MALYA
with remarkable cohesion. There are no skirmishes among siblings and no arguments between parents and children — only the u t m o s t respect. The whole family enjoys regular evenings at home at the
sion families of the 1950s, both images that do not appeal to me. But as I trudge through the daunting task of sorting out the good and bad of two cultures, the outcome is not always peachy. Although it painfully conflicts with my hedonism and carpe-diem attitude, I think every college student might benefit from reexamining the balance between themselves and their families.
Ironically, I have grown up very individualistic, perhaps in subconscious rebellion. Nevertheless, I think my parents succeeded. When I return to my heritage, even for one summer, I am immediately humbled as I recognize that a college student's priorities can effortlessly slide out-of-whack. It is a harsh realization that going to see a great concert with my buddies might not be as worthwhile as spending a weekend at home with my family.
These sentiments may evoke flashes of Pat Robertson or televi-
I am scared of the term "family
values." It seems old-fashioned, restrictive and even oppressive. But witnessing the well-oiled workings of my extended family, reminds me that family values are important. I also am reminded of how my parents relentlessly tried to instill these "conservative" values within me — their first-born, first-generation-American daughter — while facing tough opposition from an equally relentless liberal society.
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Wednesday, July 15, 1998
Section B·Page 5
205 - Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Graduate/Undergraduate Student Office help needed. Dept. of Freshman-Sophomore English. Duties are answering phone, copying, running errands, and other duties as assigned. Must Master's degree, faculty, and staff. Strong word process skills. Perfect, Excel a plus). Work up to 30 hrs./week in blocks of time. Application available in 3081 Wescoe. Start date July 27.
part-time Mother's Helper/Cook for busy family this coming school year. Meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking and light housekeeping are essential. Other sisters help take care of children. Pleasant neighborhood based on experience. Must have own car. Work to start in August, but can start immediately. Must have list of work experiences and references to J. Burdin 4500 A18 St. Suite 102, Lawrence KS 65049
Programming Assistant/Office Assistant (Student Hourly rate of 5.50 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center (Language Labs). Responsibilise students using computer equipment for data entry, designing video materials, typing and keeping inventory of supplies, other light office work, and description requirements for qualifications and application at 4069 Westfield Hall. For information, call 840-4785. Deadline August 14, 1998.
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE/RESEARCH ASSISTANT (40% time) May increase to 50% contingent on availability of funding. SALARY: $10,000-$11,000/40% DUTIES: Providing research support for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce program to promote economic development, develop economic indicators; identifying strengths and weaknesses; and using a cost-benefit model. QUALIFICATIONS: Required-Bachelor's degree in Business, or related field. Good oral and written skills are required competence. PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS: Master's or Ph.D. Experience in applied economic and business. Submit resume and cover letter to the Assistant Director, IPRPP, 60 Blake Hall, University of July 24, 1996. 60443 (785) 864-3701 DEADLINE: July 14, 1996
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AAA Resumes, Cover Letters, Mock Interviews,
and Job Counseling. Available. Make the most
solid investment you can in your future, invest
some time in yourself. Call (785) 331-2170.
X
300s Merchandise
305 - For Sale
S
JUSTICE
For sale : 1988 Honda Elite Moped 50cc. Good condition, great campus transportation. $350 firm.
Also, N46 game to be club C3. Call Matt B41-6573
310 - Computers
LARGER/FIRMER BREASTS !!!
Safe and Affordable breasts!!!
1.877-4-BREAST
1 2
For Sale. Mac $E/30 GCC tech printer $250 call 843-0202 or (913) 796-6044
340 - Auto Sales
---
89 Toyota Tercel, maroon, AC, cassette $709
JBO. Call Jessica at 838-9207.
963 Mercury Topaz, 4 dr., /C/A/ AM/FM cassette,
963 Mercury Topaz, defrost, 2800 miles, excellent
condition 85%.
360 - Miscellaneous
MIRACLE VIDEO - Summer Sale. ALL ADULT
VIDEO TAPES $12.98 & up. Come in at 1910
Haskell Ave, or call 811-7504.
$ $ $ $ $
VIRGINIA
THE CHAPMAN USED & CURIOUS GOODS
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues. - Sat.
SAMESHOP
GAME GUY
BUY
SELL
TRADE
- Sony PlayStation
- VIDEO GAMES
- Nintendo 64
* PC CD DCM
- PC CD ROM
- Super Nintendo
7 East Seventh 331-0080
www.game-guy.com
$
370 - Want to Buy
$$$$$
WANTED :
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward for your good used computer.
UNI Computers
841-4611
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
$1200 6-7 BR, Avail Aug 1, deposit, lease, no pets.
834-1801.
1 bdrm avail. July 15, 1100 Block Ohio. W/D included. $400.794-546.
3 BR Apt., near KU, Utilities paid $680 lease
no Depot No Pets IA61 Avail. now
Excellent location: 1341 Ohio 2 bdrm in plexx
dw, d, w/hook up $410. NO Prices 842-4242.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood Dr. Open 1 pm - 6pm Mon.-Fri.
843-4754
Excellent location. 1104 Tenn. near own/KU. BAp Apt. i4-plex/a p. notels. Kg1. 842-1-4824
--close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route
Quaint, comfortable, spacious, furnished rooms
with a variety of short to long beds.
utilities价. Of steel stairs 41x10,
29x8.
Spacious two bedroom apartment. Two bedroom
per square per month. 635 West 25th Street. Call 843-
709-1000.
4 BDRM/ 2 bathroom apt. at Campus Place avail.
Aug. 1986 until Aug. 1999. Excellent location, close to campus. Call Becky at 785-641-1429.
Real nice i & 2 bbm pets, close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off street parking. Absl. no pets. Avail. Aug.1 at 1037Kentucky. Call 749-2891
Nice, clean, quiet 2 bt. apt., ca/ bus.
Nice, pool and more. low utility $350.00.
Nice, quiet 2 bt. apt., ca/ bus.
Available August, 1128 Ohio, spacious 2 bedroom campus and downtown. Close to GSP & Corker College.
BEST PRICE
HOODGOGO
Several good 2 BR apts in Ohio block W/D hooks. Available Aug. $450.
Nice and large 1000 sqft it amenity with back ward, lower level, walk to campus less than a mile, two bedrooms with kitchen and new remodel bathroom, large enclosed room, reasonable rent, won't long, call 785 840-2321
Kansan Ads Pay
2 & 8 Ravals, for summer & full. Nice, queer,
clean W. Lawrence location. Private patio/balcony.
On KU bus route. Easy I-7 access. Laundry
facility & swimming pool, on site. CA, CH, DW,
Starting at $720-$435. Drop in any 6-Mon Fri.
Call Holiday Apartments. #843-6911
405 - Apartments for Rent
4 & 8-avals, for summer & fall. Nice, quiet &
clean W. Lawrence location. Walk in closet,
2 baths, on KU bus route, easy access to 1-7th,
Laundry facility & swimming pool on site. Ca, CH, DW.
Starting at $30-$700. Drop in anytime 9-6 Mon-
Fri. Call Hotel Apartments. #85-001 to view
SIRANGON PLAZA
Quiet location. 4x2m², water on
$495 all items. & W/D, built in bookshelves.
SHANNON PLAZA
Call 841-7726
2100 Heatherwood #A-2
Hurry...Don't miss this!
2R trb house for Aug. move in - loft style, 2 full baths, 1 w/jacuzzi tub & skylight, FP, garage/opener. $720 + utilities
Immediate Availability
1 & 2 BR apts;
3 BR townhouses,
$365 & up
2512 W. 6th St. 749-1102
Extended hours
10 a.m.-Friday.
9-4 n.at.
GRAYSTONE
1 & 2 Bedrooms
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 Hot Tubs
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Exercise Room
P
(25) 2Pools/2LaundryRooms
Part25
25 Volleyball Court
25 On KU Bus Route
$ \textcircled{25} $ SomeW/DHoolups
25 Low Deposits
25 Small Pets Welcome
Now leasing for the summer and fall semesters. Very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments available.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Holiday Apartments
PALM TREE
Leasing for Summer and Fall
1 Bedroom $370
2 Bedroom $435
3 Bedroom $630
4 Bedroom $760
- Swimming Pool
- On bus route
- Laundry facility
- Nice quiet setting
- On site management
- Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
Call 843-0011 or 550-0011
Office Hours
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
Cedarwood Apartments
405 - Apartments for Rent
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
• Swimming pool
• On site Laundry facilities
• Air Conditioning
• Close to shopping
& restaurants
• On KU Bus route
LCA Apartments, Inc.
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
Call Karin Now!
- REASONABLE PRICES
843-1116
- AC, DW, disposal, W/D,
microwave
- Pets welcome (at selected locations)
- Furnished and unfurnished
- Located block from campus
- On KU route
- Spacious houses/apts.
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Roommate needed for 3&4 bdrm apts.
Now Leasing for Fall!
Aspen West
Call 749-3794
- Parking lots, balconies
- Water Paid
- Laundry on Site
- Cable Paid
- No Pets
- Reasonable rates
2900 West 15th
Lawrence, KS 66049
865-2500
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere.
VILLAGE
SOUARE
apartments
9th & Avalon • 842-3040
- Studios, 1, 2, 3, bedroom apt.
- Available now and a few
- for August
- Basic cable paid
- Water paid in apt.
RESERVE YOUR NEW HOME TODAY!
- Walking distance to campus
405 - Apartments for Rent
Monday-Friday 8-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Meadowbrook
NOW LEASING FOR
SUMMER & FALL '98
STUDIOS; 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS;
DUPLEXES & HOMES
KVM
M
WALK TO CAMPUS
M mastercraft management
GREAT LOCATION!
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
- Jamestown Apartments
Red Oak Apartments
Alabama Place Apartments
- Red Oak Apartments
- Fountain Homes
Campus Place
Hanover Place
- Red Oak Apartments
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
14th & Mass • 841-1212
- Eddingham Place Apartments
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-4226
- West Meadows Condos
- 24 hr Maintenance
- 24 hr Maintenance
- Pets O.K. in Some Locations
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Sundance
Call 841-6080 or stop by
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Equal Housing Opportunity
808 W.24th St.
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am 4pm
Sun 1pm 4pm
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Swan Management
ABERDEEN
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1-bedroom $345
2-bedroom $420
NEWER!
ABERDEEN
TOWNHOMES
2 & 3 bedroom
Starting at $695
NEW!
SUMMERTREE WEST
TOWNHOMES
2-bedroom/2-level
Starting at $550
NEWER!
2300 Wakarusa Dr.
SE Corner of Clinton Pkwy,
and Wakarusa Dr.
OPEN HOUSE
M-F 1-5
Sat 10-4
Sun, 1-4
749-1288
405 - Apartments for Rent
atper, aunter complex neer 6t & fowa. D/W,
microwave, C/A/ W/d hookups. "Stacked." On-
line laundry audits reports available.
No petts, please $395. Available Morgent.
George Wages Mgt.
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Some Pets Allowed
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
Swimming Pool
- On Site Management
* Daily 3:00-5:00
- Swimming Pool
- Laundry Room
Energy Efficient
Fireplace
841-6080
841-5444
- Exercise Weight Room
410 - Condos For Rent
How to schedule an ad:
By phone: 964-4258
Unfurnished 3 BDIRM, 2 Bath, complete kitchen,
washer and dryer, $900/mo. (913) 681-8987
415 - Homes For Rent
Professionally Managed By
KVM
430 - Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
N$ responsible female roommate needed to share
W$ 875.00 + 2/4 utilities 749.22
W$ 775.00 + 2/4 utilities 749.22
Non-smoking roommate needles 2-bd, apt very
non-close to campus. Call Stephanie at 845-6300.
Call Stephanie at 845-6300.
- A phone number in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 Staff Flint
Roommate needed to support 2 bdm apt. Close to campus. On bus route. Laundry facilities in building. Avail. Aug 1st. l$195/mo. & 1/2 units. Call 331-2837 for more info or to view apt.
Stop by the Kaanan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or crcncc,
charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Rates Cost per line per day
Roommate-Grad. and Undergard gals seek friendly, considerate, N/S roomie for 3 bdrm. house. Avail. Aug. 1. Must like pets. $240 +1/3utilities. 832-9587
Non-certainty is assume for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Blind Box Numbers:
Classified Information and order form
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$21.00 (4 lines X 1.05 per line X 5 days).
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when canceled before their expiration date.
Calculation Rates:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad by (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.
**Buffets:**
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Dollarsign
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
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.
**INFORMATION**
140 Lost & Found
215 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
225 Tying Services
305 For Sale
116 Computers
**PARTNIALS**
Furniture Hallside
Opening Sheds
Stereo Equipment
Tickets
Auto Sales
Mice/MacNeau
105 Personnel
110 Business Personals
115 On Campus
120 Announcements
123 Travel
130 Entertainment
Cost per mile per day
1X 2-5X 4-7X 6-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.50 2.00 1.40 1.20 1.00 0.80
2.90 1.55 1.05 0.95 0.90 0.70
2.25 1.40 1.00 0.95 0.80 0.68
2.15 1.25 0.95 0.85 0.80 0.68
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form · Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
730 Wanted to Buy
490 For Rent
141 Condos for Nest
141 Homes for Nest
240 Real Estate for Sale
240 Remodeled Home
Date ad begins: Total days in paper:
Total ad cost: Flatrate
Address:_
4account numbers
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
_Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS.68454
Wednesday, July 15, 1998
Section B · Page 5
205 - Help Wanted
Graduate/Undergraduate Student Office help needed. Dept. of Freshman-Sophomore English. Duties include answering phones, copying, running errands, and other duties as assigned. Must be well with students, faculty, and staff. Stroke training is essential (Word-Perfect, Excel a plus). Work up to 60 hrs week in blocks of time. Application available at 3081 Wescoe. Start date July 27.
Part-time Mother's Helper/Cook for busy family this coming school year. Meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking and light housekeeping are job. Other sisters help take care of children. Play with pets based on experience. Must have own car. Work to start in August, but can start immediately. Reqs. Prep with list of work experiences and reference letters. K6 4040. W18 St. Suite 1012, Lawrence, KS 60494
Programming Assistant/Office Assistant (Student Hourly rate of 5.50 per hour) at the Academic Resource Center (Language Labs). Responsibilily including computer development, using computer equipment for data entry, designing video materials, typing and keeping inventory of supplies, other light office work, and description with required qualifications and information, call 864-4785. Deadline August 14, 1998.
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE/RESEARCH ASSISTANT - (40% time) May increase to 30% contingent on availability of funding. SALARY: $10,000-$11,000/40%. DUTIES: Providing research support for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce economic development, developing data and analyzing economic indicators; identifying strengths and weaknesses, and using a cost-benefit model. DUTIES: Required Bachelor's degree in Economic Business; good oral and written skills and proven research competence. PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS: Master's or Ph.D. Experience in applied economic and business. Submit resume and cover letter. Research Business Practice. IEEE JPBR, IPPR 805 Blake Hall, University of Kansas, 60445 (785) 864-3701. DEADLINE: July 24, 1984 AA/EO
Student Housing Dining Services
Starting Pay $5.50/hour Flexible Schedules Make New Friends Gain Valuable Experience Convenient Locations Scholarship Opportunities
Call or stop by any Dining Center
Ekdahl Dining - 864-2260
Oliver Dining - 864-4087
GSP Dining - 864-3120
Hashinger Office - 864-1014
EEO/AA Employer
TACO BELL
Now hiring part & full time
days & late evenings.
$6.00 plus per hour.
Apply in person:
Tues.-Sat. 10:00-5:00 p.m.
1408 W.23rd & 1220 W.6th
W.23rd
225 - Professional Services
SCHOOL
For free consultation ca $ ^{1 1} $
J
divorce, criminal and civil matters
JAMES G. STROBE
DONALD D. STROBE
Donald G. Strobe
Sally G. Kesley
16 Eleanor
16 Eleanor
Free Initial Consultation
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 NAMES 843-4023
235 - Typing Services
9
AAA Resumes, Cover Letters, Mock Interviews,
and Job Counseling Available. Make the most
solid investment you can in your future, invest
some time in yourself. Call (785) 331-2107.
X
300s Merchandise
305 - For Sale
$
For sale: **1868 Honda Elite Moped Sodec**. Good condition, great campus transfer. New. Call Matt 341-275-4092.
LARGER/FIMRER BREAFTS !!!!
Safe and Affordable Ingredients!
Tork Free-Fill - Tork Free-Fill 87-491-2600
310- Computers
自营
For Sale. Mac SE/30 GCC tech printer $250 call 1430-0232 (910) 766-6604
340-Auto Sales
---
'89 Toyota Tercel, maroon, AC, cassette; $700
OBO. Call Jessica at 838-9207.
1080 Mercury Topaz, 4d, A/C/AM/FM cassette,
power lock and seashells, microsoft excel,
phonebook, phone. (866) 323-2500, Phone
(866) 323-2500
360 - Miscellaneous
MIRACLE VIDEO - Summer Sale. ALL ADULT
INSTITUTE. Come in at 1910
Haskell Ave, or call 841-7506.
$ $ $ $ $
MEDICINE
THE CHAPMAN USED & CURIOUS GOODS
731 New Hampshire 841-0550
BUY • SELL • TRADE
Noon - 6:00 Tues. - Sat.
GAME GUY
BUY SELL TRADE
GAME GUY
VIDEO GAMES
- Sony PlayStation
- PC CD ROM
- Super Nintendo
- Nintendo
7 East Seventh 331-0080
www.game-guy.com
370 - Want to Buy
$$$$$
WANTED :
Your used computer (PC or Mac) We are paying up to $1,000 Reward for your good used computer.
UNI Computers
841-4611
HOTEL
400s Real Estate
405 - Apartments for Rent
Apartments
$1200 6-7 BR, Avail Aug 1, deposit, lease, no pets.
843-1601.
t bdrm avail. July 15, 1100 Block Ohio. W/D included. $400.794-546.
Spacious two bedroom apartment. Two bedroom
820 per room. 635 West 29th Street. Call 843-
716-7155.
4BDHR/ 2 bathroom apt. at Campus Place avail.
Aug. 1966 until Aug. 1975, close
access to building facilities: 785-643-1429
or 785-643-1420
3 BR Apt, NU KE, Utilities paid $600 lease deposit No Pets 843-1651 Avail now
HEATHERWOOD VAILLE APARTMENTS
HEatherwood Dr. 1pm | 6pm | Mon-Fri.
843-7454
Excellent location *1104 Tenn. near town/KU*
Bri Apt. 43+ p/clean *1a no pet.册* Aug. 182-4242
**
Excellent location. 1414 Ohio 2 hbrm in 4pxE,
dw, d/w book up. $410. NO Prices 842-942-634
Available August, 1128 Ohio, spacious 2 bedroom
campus, campus and downtown. Close to
GSP & Coborn Airport.
Quiet, comfortable, spacious, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks to KU. Some utilities paid. Off street parking. No pets. 941-5500
Real nice! & 12 bdmr apts, close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off street parking. Absl. no pets. Avail. Aug. 1 at 1037Kentucky. Call 749-2919
Nice, clean. quiet 2 b r. apt., appliances. a/c bun
r. pool and more. Low utility.少 $60. No smoke
in the room.
BEST PRICE
storitioHIOIRIOID
several good 2 BK storage
Ohio block. W/D
hookups. Avg Bag. Aug. 50
Nice and large 1000kg it armancy with back yard, lower level, walk to campus less than a mile, two bedrooms with kitchen and newly remodel bathroom, eat-in kitchen. Don't forget, won't last, call 840-952-2532, available Aftersun.
Kansan Ads Pay
2 & 8 BRAVs, for summer & fall. Nice. quiet
1 & 8 W. Lawrence location. Private patio/balcony.
On KUbusroute. Easy 1-7 access. Laundry.
facility & swimming pool, on site. CA, CH, DW,
Starting at $370-$435. Drop in any 6 Mon-Fri.
Call Hall Inquiry Apartments. 843-0911
HOTEL ALTA
405 - Apartments for Rent
3 & 4 RBAs, avail for summer & fall. Nice, quiet & clean W. Lawrence location. Walk-in cabin, 2 baths, on KU bus route, easy access to 17-laned facility & swimming pool on site. Ca. CHI Starting at $30.690. Drop in anytime 6-Mon-Fri. Call Hall Storage Apartments. #845-0119 to view
SHANNON PLAZA
Quiet location in appl. spa, water pd
$495 all appls & W/D, built in bookshelves
SHANNON.PLAZA
2 BR townhome for Aug. move in - loft style, 2 full baths, 1 w/jacuzzi tub & skylight, FP, *arage/opener* $720 + tubs
Immediate Availability
1 & 2 BR apts.;
3 BR townhouses,
$365 & up
2100 Heatherwood #A-2
Hurry...Don't miss this!
2512 W. 6th St. 749-1102
Extended hours
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
9-5 a.m.
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W.24th & Nailsmith
842-5111
1&2 Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
3 Hot Tubs
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Exercise Room
2Pools/2LaundryRooms
Park25
25 Volleyball Court
volleyball Court
On KU Pue Routes
25 On KU Bus Route
25 LowDeposits
(25) SomeW/DHoolaips
25 Small Pets Welcome
Now leasing for the summer and fall semesters. Very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments available.
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Holiday Apartments
Tropical island with palm tree and ocean.
Leasing for Summer and Fall
Bedding for Summer and
1 Bedroom $370
2 Bedroom $435
3 Bedroom $630
4 Bedroom $760
-Swimming Pool
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
Call 843-0011 or 550-0011
Office Hours
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
Cedarwood Apartments
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
• Swimming pool
• On site Laundry facilities
• Air Conditioning
• Close to shopping &
restaurants
• On KU Bus route
• BEAFFERABLE PRICES
LCA Apartments, Inc.
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
405 - Apartments for Rent
Call Karin Now!
843-1116
- AC, DW, disposal, W/D microwave
- Pets welcome (at selected locations)
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Furnished and unfurnished
- Located block from campus
- Located block from campus
- On KU bus route
(locations)
- Parking lots, balconies
Aspen West
- Water Paid
- Roommate needed for 3&4 bdrm apts.
Call 749-3794
- Laundry on Site
- Cable Paid
Now Leasing for Fall!
- Spacious houses/apts.
- On KU bus route
- Reasonable rates
- No Pets
865-2500
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS 66049 865-2500
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere.
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
9th & Avalon • 842-3040
- Studios, 1, 2, 3, bedroom apt.
- 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes
- Available now and a few
- Basic cable paid
- Water paid in apt.
- Walking distance to campus
405 - Apartments for Rent
Monday-Friday 8-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Meadowbrook
KVM
NOW LEASING FOR
SUMMER & FALL '98
STUDIOS; 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS;
DUPLEXES & HOMES
GREAT LOCATION!
M mastercraft management
M
WALK TO CAMPUS
- Jamestown Apartments
- Alabama Place Apartments
- Red Oak Apartments
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
- Eddingham Place Apartments
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
- Fountain Homes
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasol • 749-4226
- Pets O.K. in Some Locations
- West Meadows Condo
- 24 hr Maintenance
Call 841-6080 or stop by
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
808 W.24th St.
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm
Sat 10am-4pm
Sun 1pm-4pm
Equal Housing Opportunity
Swan Management
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1-bedroom $345
2-bedroom $420
NEWER!
ABERDEEN
TOWNHOMES
2 & 3 bedroom
Starting at $695
NEW!
SUMMERTREE WEST
TOWNHOMES
2-bedroom/2-level
Starting at $550
NEWER!
2300 Wakarusa Dr. SE Corner of Clinton Pkwy and Wakarusa Dr.
OPEN HOUSE
M-F 1-5
Sat 10-4
Sun. 1-4
749-1288
405 - Apartments for Rent
atps, at newer complex near 6th & itowa. D/W,
microwave, C/A/W d/ hookups. "Stacked." On
lainty laundry available. Some carpets available.
No pets, please keep out. Available.
George Waters Mgtm.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRIC
- Energy Efficient
- Exercise Weigh
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
- Some Pets Allowed
- Fireplace
- Daily 3:00-5:00
- Laundry Room
- Exercise Weight Room
How to schedule an ad:
a By phone: 864-1258
- On Site Management
Unfurnished 3 DBRM, 2 Bath, complete kitchen.
*washer and dryer*, $90/moil (913) 681-8897
410 - Condos For Rent
841-6080
841-5444
Professionally Managed By
415 - Homes For Rent
KVM
Real nice spacious 5 bdm house close to KU.
Furnished lots, of windows. Absolutely NO pets.
749-219-319
ביטוח
THE UNIVERSITY DAILX KANSAN
430 - Roommate Wanted
Non-smoking roommate needed. 2-bd. apt very close to campus. Call Stephanie @ 849-605-6001 or Call Stephen @ 849-605-6001.
Roommate. Grad. and Undergrad gals see
friendly, considerate, N/S roomie for 3 bdrm.
house. Avail. Aug. 1. Must like pets. $240 +1/3 utili-
ties. 832-8587
Roommate needed to share 2 bdm apt. Close to campus. On bus route. Laundry facilities in building. Avail. Aug 1st 1$95/mo. & 1/2 units. Call 331-2837 for more info or to view apt.
Abs phoned in may be killed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 Shuffle Flint
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kanan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$21.00 (4 lines X $1.05 per line X 5 days).
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.
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| 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 | 1.40 | 1.00 | 0.85 | 0.80 | 0.60 |
| 9+ lines | 2.15 | 1.25 | 0.95 | 0.85 | 0.80 | 0.60 |
Classifications
165 Personnel
118 Business Personals
119 On Campus
122 Announcements
125 Travel
130 Entertainment
140 Leaf & Furnish
262 Help Wanted
223 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
360 For Sale
319 Computers
141 Loc & Wound
232 Goods Goods
323 Shipping Equipment
338 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
366 Misc. Minutes
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
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5
Please print your ad one word per box:
370 Wanted to Buy
405 For Rent
110 Condos for Rent
115 Homes for Rent
200 Real Estate for Sale
430 Resumes Wanted
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The University Dalya Kannan, 11 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 680-454
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 15, 1998
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Something worth seeing
The President's family is greeted by a woman and a man as they arrive at the hospital.
MOVIE REVIEWS
As a worried Mary (Cameron Diaz) looks on, Ted (Ben Stiller) is carried to an ambulance after an accident involving his "family jewels" in the Twentieth Century Fox movie There's Something About Mary. Contributed Photo
Nothing's sacred in Mary; movie seems tasteless
By Jeremy M. Doherty Kansan movie critic
If nothing else, There's Something About Mary, the latest from filmmaking brothers Peter Farrely and Bobby Farrelly, will contribute to a gigantic boost in sales of button-fly pants.
Early on, Ted (Ben Stiller) manages to get his manhood caught in his zipper during a hurried pit stop at the house of his prom date, Mary (Cameron Diaz). While Ted convulses in agonizing, humiliating pain, Mary's mother decides that her daughter's suitor needs just a good shot of antibacterial spray.
But the Brothers Farrell don't let our hero Ted off so easily, and the entire movie is something like a catalog of worst-case scenarios. Viewers who have seen the brothers' earlier gross-out epics, *Dumb and Dumber* and *Kingpin*, know that poor Ted will suffer many more indignities before receiving any peace.
In these days of audience-friendly comedies, the Farrellys embrace toilet humor and groin jokes with a chutzpah reminiscent of the early Zucker comedies or the better Kids in the Hall sketches.
Their motto appears to be, "If it offends anybody, it's funny."
Does it offend? Sure, especially if you're someone who blanches at comedy that takes a what-the-hey approach to animal abuse, the mentally disabled and masturbation.
from his member, the Farrellys skip ahead 13 years, where the protagonist still is unable to shake his fixation on Mary. Based on the advice of his cheerful, wife-dominating buddy (Chris Elliott), Ted hires private eye Pat Healy (Matt Dillon) to hunt down his former dream girl.
Pat does find Mary, who's working as an orthopedic surgeon in Florida. However, Pat falls for her and tells Ted that Mary has put on a couple of hundred pounds and has a few illegitimate kids.
Following Ted's near-separation
But Ted cannot shake Mary's spell on his heart and sets off on an odyssey involving sexual solicitation, hard-nosed cops and canine shock therapy.
Meet results
Once it gets past the racier elements, There's Something About Mary emerges as a fairly good-natured romp about pursuing one's true love.
Kansan Rating: *** out of **** Running time: 2 hours Rated: R for strong comic sexual content and language
Stiller, whose hit-and-miss outings as a director have tended to mask his sharp comic talents, makes a likable doofus out of the sad sack Ted. When his quest for Mary's hand evolves into a blatantly absurd five-way competition, it's easy to root for him. The weak link here is Dillon, a competent dramatic actor who has no chops for this material.
There's Something About Mary isn't going to cure heart disease, and it probably will incite a few heart attacks among the more buttoned-down audiences members. For the rest of us, it's a keeper.
Lethal Weapon shot without developed plot, characters
Kansan movie critic
By Jeromy M. Doherty
At this rate, audiences should start worrying about the quality of the upcoming fourth chapter in the Star Wars series.
The Hollywood folks lately seem incapable of delivering decent fourth installments. Batman & Robin was a visual eyeres掩 quearing as comic book fun, and sloppy production railroaded last fall's Alien Resurrection.
Director Richard Donner has handed us Lethal Weapon 4, a badly acted sitcom that bears little resemblance to the classic cop thriller from 1987. Given the six-year hiatus separating this misfire and the third movie, die-hard fans of detectives Riggs and Murtaugh are in for an incredible disappointment.
The bulk of the problem lies with stars Mel Gibson and Danny Glover who look too old to be firing guns and chasing bad guys. The appeal of the Lethal series has been the mismatched pairing of the
characters: psychotic war vet Riggs and family-man Murtaugh. That unpredictability, not found in this entry, is sorely missed.
The plot, such as it is, concerns a group of Asian gangsters who are smuggling slave labor into the United States from China. Their leader (Hong Kong action star Jet Li) is using them to mint counterfeit money, which he will use to buy some criminal colleagues out of captivity.
But our heroes, accompanied by the increasingly annoying Joe Pesci, catch on to the bad guys, and director Donner proceeds with the usual car chases and shootouts. Most of this does not matter. For unknown reasons, Donner and writer Channing Gibson focus on weak comedy routines and touchy-feely, emotional scenes.
Riggs is struggling with whether he should marry his cop girlfriend (Rene Russo). The suicidal cop who once put a gun in his mouth while watching Bugs Bunny cartoons no longer exists. He has been replaced by Mel Gibson, who just churns out another
LETHAL WEAPON 4
**Kansan Rating:** * out of ****
Running time: 2 hours, 5 minutes
Rated: R for violence and language
of his matinee-idol star turns.
On a another note, the guy in the director's seat appears to have gone xenophobic in his depiction of Asians. In this movie, they either serve as cardboard villains or walking punch lines. Gibson himself freely tosses out the word gook. Is this supposed to be entertaining?
The exception in this mess is Li, whose neck-snapping gangster is the best villain the series has had since Gary Busey from the first movie. Unfortunately for him, the Lethal movies stopped focusing on character and storytelling a long time ago. In their eagerness to make a quick buck (the movie wrapped filming this past May), Donner and his crew have made an incoherent train-wreck of a movie.
Let's hope George Lucas is paying attention.
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Tomorrow's weather
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE
PO BOX
TOPEKA,
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
PD BOX 3585
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kansan
Cooler tomorrow with partly sunny skies.
HIGH 87
Wednesday
July 22,1998
Section:
A
Vol. 108 . No. 158
HIGH LOW 87 66
Section:
A
A
Online today
Help pick the new Monopoly piece that is soon to be added to the popular board game.
Vol. 108·No.158
ANSAL
Sports today
http://www.monopoly.com
KU
Walk-on quarterback Jake Letourneau may receive a scholarship one year early because of the loss of backup Akili Roberson.
SEE PAGE 1B
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THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Utilities warn to reduce power use
Blackouts are possible to conserve electricity in wake of heat wave
By Jerry Jackson
(USPS 650-640)
Kansan staff writer
The recent Midwestern heat wave that has claimed 81lives as of Monday has claimed a new victim; the power supply.
Representatives from Kansas Power and Light and Kansas Gas and Electric issued a Peak Warning to their customers throughout the state Monday and extended the warning into today.
A Peak Warning indicates that customers should set their air conditioners to 82 degrees between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m. and only use high-energy-consumption appliances, such as washers, dryers and dishwashers, after 10 p.m.
Richard Good, community-relations manager for KPL, said that all customers should take the warning seriously.
"Because of the heat, the power market is extremely tight across the entire Midwest," Good said. "The power companies just can't meet the demands being placed on them right now."
In expectation of the record-breaking, triple-digit temperatures across the state this week, both KPL and KGE are preparing for the potential of rolling blackouts, the temporary cutoff of power to areas that are using too much electricity, Good said.
Similar rolling blackouts have occurred in Denver, where power was cut to areas of the city in 30-minute intervals. The Public Service Company of Colorado has issued warnings that blackouts may be necessary again throughout this week.
Good said that if KPL implemented rolling blackouts, the intervals probably would last closer to an hour.
"Those kind of blackouts can be avoided in our area if customers conserve energy." he said.
Both KPL and KGE officials are working with local power-company officials
to inform them of the potential rolling- blackouts' schedule. Those customers affected by the blackouts would be notified in advance if possible.
At the University of Kansas, facilities operations has taken several measures to deal with the power shortage and the possibility of blackouts.
To help prevent the possibility of blackouts, the power companies already have curtailed power to interruptible customers, which are high-energy users under contracts that allow their power to be shut off during periods of high usage. The power companies also have asked their 150 highest-usage customers to voluntarily reduce their power consumption.
Gary Weishaar, associate director of engineering for facilities operations, said that the University did not have an interruptible contract with KPL, so the University had to take action on its own
Facilities operations sent out a campus-wide e-mail on Monday with a list of steps that faculty and staff should take to reduce power consumption.
POWER CONSERVATION TIPS
When possible, cook in a toaster,
microwave or broiler oven. They use half the energy of a regular oven.
Use ceiling and portable fans to circulate cool air better.
Walk through your home or office and turn off any nonessential electrical equipment.
Close drapes to shut out sunlight, particularly those on west windows.
- Keep lamps and televisions away from the thermostat, where their heat causes a higher reading than the average room temperature.
- Courtesy of Kansas Power and Light and Kansas Gas and Electric
Weisharai said that in addition to the email, facilities operations had shut down several redundant air conditioners in various campus buildings.
"We want the people on campus to understand the seriousness of the situation," he said.
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, START YOUR ENGINES
The glitter
Car by Marce.
Marce.
THE
MISSING
GIRL
Reading
Children show off their homemade miniature art cars along Jayhawk Boulevard. The parade of toy cars was put on by the Hilltop Child Development Center's Gold Room class last Friday. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN SEE PAGE 3B FOR STORY,
Smartcard not smart enough for bus lines
By Liz Wristen
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Smartcard is not quite so smart.
Why is the Smartcard not so smart? The card, introduced to students at the University last spring, should allow students many advantages on campus, one of which is the ability to use it as a bus pass.
This is what many KU students and administrators think, as well as Nicole Skalla, transportation coordinator for KU on Wheels.
That claim does not ring true at this time.
"In order to use the Smartcard as a bus pass, special software had to be devised so that the card could work in
the buses," Skalla said. "We expected to have a pilot project this summer, and we expected to have the right equipment to encode the cards for use on the buses. We don't have that vet."
The University contracted the work with Cybermark, and the cards were manufactured by Cisa, an Italian company that designs locks. Cisa generally designs cards that may be used as keys for hotel rooms, but Skalla said that the company was working to manipulate the cards enough so that they could be used as readers for the bus system.
"I don't think Cisa realized the difference there would be with working on a bus program," Skalla said.
Skalla said she first heard of the plans to incorporate the card into the
bus system last spring. The University entered contract negotiations for the campus-wide Smartcard program last fall.
The University expected to receive the equipment for the buses by August 18, which was the deadline set by Cybermark. Skalla said that she hoped the University would receive the equipment by September 1. However, this setback will cause the University to rely on temporary passes provided by Cybermark. The passes will be similar to the temporary passes used by summer bus riders.
"Nicole is working with the University in the hopes that the school will provide us with help to allow our bus riders to get around efficiently," said Kevin Yoder, student body president.
Yoder said the Student Senate would work to keep any possible costs from being passed on to students or bus riders. KU on Wheels donated $7,000 to be used for the software, encoders and hand-held computers necessary for the buses. The University will pay $12,000 for the installation of the readers.
"The program was just handed to us, and now we must deal with it one way or another."
"I think the move to use the cards came too fast, not just for us, but for the University," Skalla said. "In a few years, after everyone is used to the cards, I think they will be a very valuable asset. Right now, the temporary passes are going to be more of a hassle, and I don't think students are going to like them."
GTAs to finally get health care after long fight with University
By Julie Sachs
Kansan staff writer
After a long struggle, graduate assistants at the University will finally receive a health care plan.
The Health Care Commission in Topeka decided July 16 that the University would pay an average of 50 percent of the total cost of the plan, said Mark Horowitz, Graduate Teaching Assistant Coalition organizer.
Details are still under speculation, said Provost David Shulenburger.
"There are still negotiations going on with the Health Care Commission," Shulenburger said.
"I consider this a success for GTAs and GRAs in our struggle to gain fair working conditions." Horowitz said.
The University will spend an estimated $500,000 on health care for graduate research and teaching assistants, said Kevin Armitage, GTA in Western Civilization.
Horowitz said that the Health Care Commission would try to offer two health care plans to GTAs and GRAs.
"It is kind of unfortunate we lost our fee waiver," said Mike Schmitt, GTA in psychology. "But health insurance is more important than a fee waiver."
Each plan would have costs that increase as the individual enters older age groups. Individuals would be grouped by three price tieres: under 25, 26-31 and 31 and older. Horowitz said.
The first plan would offer basic coverage.
It is basically the same plan available for all KU students at Watkins Memorial Health Center, Shulenburger said.
The second plan, called the GM Underrider's Plan, would offer more coverage at a higher price.
It is unclear whether the insurance that will be offered to GTAs and GRAs will cover medical expenses outside Watkins.
If the individual is older than 31 years of age, the Health Care Commission estimates that the GM plan would cost about $50 a month, Horowitz said.
This means that many graduate assistants would be paying an extremely high price if they wanted a more comprehensive plan, Horowitz said.
The average age of a University GTA is 29. Armitage said.
"For GTAs, 31 years and up, to enroll in high health care it means taking five percent of your income," Armitage said.
According to Health Care Commission estimates, individuals under 25 would pay about $15 a month for the GM plan.
"Since I'm young, it's a lot more inexpensive for me," Schmitt said. "It's going to mean that I have a lot more money for food and rent."
Horowitz said that he wished the rates were lower for the top age group.
"I hope this is something the administration will be willing to work with GTAC on in the future."
Despite the price, the coalition is happy with the results. Horowitz said.
"Since GTAC was founded in 1995, health care has always been the thing we fought for the most," Horowitz said.
CORRECTION
Because of a copy editing error, the title of the sober driver program was omitted from the story in the July 15 issue of The University Daily Kansas. The program is called "Hand 'em over to someone sober." For information on the program, contact Nicole Skalla, transportation coordinator of KU on Wheels, in the Student Senate office at 864-4644.
.
+
8
2A
The Inside Front
Wednesday July 22,1998
News
from campus, the city and the nation
NEW YORK
LAWRENCE
A group of student organizations are sponsoring Hawk Link.
On CAMPUS:
A University of Kansas assistant professor has been awarded a $100,000 grant for cancer research. In LAWRENCE
Lawrence police started a weeklong series of drivers' license checkpoints last night at several intersections throughout Lawrence.
- New York: Owners of strip clubs and pornography shops are hoping a last-minute appeal will delay the city from xiling its red-light districts to industrial neighborhoods.
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Minority Affairs, Asian American Student Union, Black Student Union, Hispanic American Leadership Organization and Native American Student Association are sponsoring Hawk Link, a minority student community program, August 15-16.
Student Union Activities, Department of Student Housing, the Office of the Chancellor, the Office of New Student Orientation and the Office of Undergraduate Admissions are providing additional support.
For more information or to volunteer, Contact Airick West at 864-4351.
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Moving in crews will be on site at residence halls.
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Pizza party and information fair at the Burge Union
9 p.m. to Midnight Scheduled Hawk Week programming
Sunday, August 16
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Moving-in crews will be on site at residence halls.
4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Dinner and information fair at the Multicultural Resource Center
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Scheduled Hawk Week programming
9 p.m. to 11 p.m. Entertainment and party at Anschutz Sports Pavilion
CAMPUS
Professor awarded grant to research cancer cells
A University of Kansas assistant professor has been awarded a $100,000 grant for cancer research.
Xiangyi Lu, assistant professor of biochemistry, molecular and cell biology, was awarded the money by the Heartland Division of the American Cancer Society.
Lu said that part of the grant would be
used to research how to repair malfunctioning cancer-causing cells.
Lu also said that the grant would help researchers better fight cancerous cells by identifying the normal components that control cell growth.
Lu's grant will span one year beginning July 1, said Laurie Dunlap, media relations and promotion manager for the Heartland Division of the American Cancer Society. The grant is one of 1.7 provided this year to the Heartland Division that encompasses Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma.
Lu also received a $198,000, two-year grant for cancer research that ended in June of 1998. Dunlap said.
Duane Wagler
LAWRENCE
Police checkpoints to be effective until Tuesday
Lawrence police started a weeklong series of drivers' license checkpoints last night at several intersections throughout Lawrence.
Sgt. George Wheeler said that the checkpoints, which will be set up during the late evenings and early mornings until Tuesday, will be used to look for drunk drivers, cars with expired license tags and drivers not wearing their seat belts or with no proof of insurance.
The checkpoints are located in the 1300 block of Massachusetts Street, the 2100 block of Iowa Street, the intersection of Sixth and Iowa streets, the Kansas River Bridge, the intersection of 23rd Street and Haskell Avenue and the intersection of 23rd and Harper streets. Wheeler said.
"We'll have breathalizers there, so we can check for intoxicated drivers as well," Wheeler said.
He said that officers would stop every car that came through the checkpoint area when possible.
"Whenever traffic starts to get backed up, we'll stop every other car or every third car," he said. "It will have to be either everybody, or it will be done indiscriminately."
Wheeler said that police are using checkpoints because with the recent addition of 18 officers they had the manpower to operate the checkpoints.
—Ronnie Wachter
NATION
N.Y. strip clubs,porn shops wait for appeal ruling
NEW YORK — Owners of strip clubs and pornography shops are hoping a last-minute appeal will delay the city from exiling its red-light districts to industrial neighborhoods.
Under zoning changes that take effect today, sex-oriented theaters, bookstores, massage parlors and dance clubs would be banned from operating within 500 feet of homes, churches, schools or each other.
A federal appeals court could rule as early as today on a request to delay enforcement.
Giuliani said Monday the curtain would not come down overnight, even if courts let the new rules take effect.
"This isn't going to be like La Guardia smashing the slot machines," he said, referring to former Mayor Fiorella La Guardia's famous gambling raids.
In the meantime, workers at pornography shops around town were mingling T-shirts, souvenirs and family-friendly videos with more risque fare. City officials' warn that stores that stock 40 percent or more pornography could be subject to eviction.
At XXtasy Peepworld on Eighth Avenue Monday, videos with names like "Taboo VIII" now share shelf space with titles like "NFL Football Super Duper Follies." A few doors down, another storefront that offers 25-cent peep shows had its windows stacked with
—The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The spectacular sales of the impotency treatment Viagra have tapered off in recent weeks.
Viagra users having less sex,sales down
In part, the sales rush has slowed because some insurers won't pay for the drug. In addition, patients who once raced to doctors' offices for prescriptions now find they use the pills only occasionally.
"Many people are having less sex than they had anticipated," said J. Francis Eid, director of the New York Presbyterian Impotency Center.
In the week that ended July 10, pharmacists filled 184,312 prescriptions for the little blue pill, compared to a peak of 303,424 in the week that ended May 8, according to industry researcher IMS Health.
That still makes Viagra one of the nation's hottest selling drugs, on track to reach $1 billion in sales in its first year.
Viagra's first few months on the market haven't been trouble-free. More than 30 people who used Viagra have died, prompting insurers Prudential HealthCare and Humana Inc., to refuse to pay for it.
Pfizer Inc., which makes Viagra, and the Food and Drug Administration point out that users of the drug are often elderly and have other health problems. Both have maintained that there's no evidence any of the patients would have died if they had taken the drug as directed.
Kaiser Permanente, the nation's largest health maintenance organization, decided that at about $10 a pill, Viagra is too costly. A few insurers have rationed the drug, offering to pick up the cost for one or two pills a week.
The Associated Press
ON THE RECORD
- One 486 computer and a 15-inch flat screen monitor were stolen between 11:30 a.m. on June 22 and 6:30 p.m. on July 5 at the foreign language department in Wescoe Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said.The loss was valued at $1.726.
A male Lawrence resident was arrested for OUI at 2:28 a.m. on July 15 near 18th Street and Naismith Drive, the KU Office of Public Safety said. His bond was set at $500.
A male Lawrence resident was arrested for possession of marijuana, transporting an open container and DWI after he hit a no parking sign at 3:21 a.m. last Friday in the 1000 block of Indiana Street, the KIU Office of Public Safety said.
A female Lawrence resident was arrested for OU1 at 1:34 a.m. last Sunday at Naismith Drive and 22nd Street, the KU Office of Public Safety said. Her bond was set at $500.
said the bond was set at $50.
■ A brass plaque was vandalized between 5 p.m. on May 15 and 3:30 p.m. on July 11 at Pearson Hall, the KU Office of Public Safety said. The damage was estimated at $20.
A male Lawrence resident illegally accessed a computer at 3:46 a.m. on July 10 at the Computer Center, the KU Office of Public Safety said.
The door of a KU student's house was damaged, and a portable CD player and jewelry were stolen between 11 a.m. June 29 and 9:15 p.m. July 11 in the 2000 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police said. The items were valued at $1.455.
A KU employee was harassed by telephone between May 10 and July 15 in the 3000 block of West 27th Street, Lawrence police said.
The passenger side door and rear window of a KU employee's car were damaged between 4 p.m. July 10 and 10 a.m. July 11 in the 700 block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police said. The damage was estimated at $1,000.
A KU student was assaulted between 10:53 and 10:56 p.m. Sunday in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police said.
A chemistry department employee reported a disturbance of the peace between 1:54 and 3:55 a.m. Saturday in the 1300 block of Westbrooke Street, Lawrence police 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 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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Kansan staff
Gwen Olson ... Editor
Ann Premer ... Managing editor
Tom Eblen. General manager, news adviser
Ashley Bonner ... Business manager
Nicole Lauderdale. Retail sales manager
Dan Simon ... Sales and marketing adviser
Justin Knupp ... Technology coordinator
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Wednesday, July 22, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A · Page 3
Officials prepare to take financial reins of hospital
By Duane Wagler
Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Robert Hemenway was named chairman of the University of Kansas Medical Center hospital authority board at its first meeting last week.
"That's really appropriate because the hospital is so tied to the University in its mission," said Donald Hagen, board member and executive vice chancellor of the Med Center.
I will try to answer as best I can.
Hemenway:
Named chairman
of Med Center
authority board.
Hagen said that the meeting made it clear that the hospital's mission as a teaching and research institution was to be continued after its projected Oct. 1 transition from a state agency to a public authority.
The transition will allow the University to control purchasing and to invest hospital money without being subject to state regulation.
Irene Cumming, president
and CEO of the hospital, was elected board president. She said that at the meeting, the board learned about the hospital's financial position in the increasingly competitive health-care environment.
The board also discussed employee compensation plans. Cumming said. Health care and retirement benefits will remain the same for hospital authority employees. Additionally, hospital authority employees will be offered a new short-term disability program that would replace part of their pay during an extended illness.
Hemenway said that the board organized itself into five task forces: legal matters, finance issues, personnel matters, medical staff issues and external affairs. Hemenway will serve on the finance task force.
Hemenway expressed optimism about the hospital's financial condition.
"The hospital is a financially stable institution and has had a good year," he said.
The meeting set a strong foundation for the hospital's transition, Hemenway said.
"The board clearly is dedicated to the challenge of making the KU teaching hospital not only a successful public authority but one that really supports the educational mission of the Medical Center and the University," he said.
Hemenway said the board would meet next on Aug. 18.
Positions dwindle in department
Fewer posts for fulltime faculty worries English chairman
By Graham K. Johnson
Kansan staff writer
The English department seems to be shrinking and that has Richard Hardin concerned.
In studying his department after becoming the chairman last year, Hardin discovered evidence of a decline in the number of full-time English faculty positions. Hardin said that according to the 1977-78 University catalog there were 56 full-time, tenure track faculty, as opposed to the 41 there are now. Hardin said that student enrollment has continued to grow, putting pressure on a department with fewer faculty.
After two recent additions, the department still has 13 positions fewer than it had in the late 1970s. Hardin said the problem was that the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences had not hired enough replacements for
He said that the administration had basically told them to pick up the slack.
"We hear: 'Well, if we can let you hire anybody, we'll let you know," Hardin said. "But meantime, try to make do by having your own faculty
retirees.
teach more courses or teach more students in sections."
The consequences are larger class sizes and less effective instruction, Hardin said.
"In the final analysis, it's just too bad that we haven't been able to grow to keep up with the student population and the student demands," Hardin said.
tion in faculty levels, particularly in the late '70s and '80s. Strikwerda said he thought things had been getting better during the last seven to eight years and that it was a goal of the administration to reattain those faculty levels.
Hardin said he did not think that
"In the final analysis,it's just too bad that we haven't been able to grow to keep up with the student population and the student demand."
He said that the problem could get worse because of the number of people reaching retirement age.
Carl Strikwerda, associate dean for the humanities in the college, said that there had been a dramatic reduc-
Richard Hardin
English Department Chair
did not think that there was a solid plan.
Strikwerda said the decrease in faculty levels in the '70s and '80s was because of falling enrollment levels and decreased federal funding. This had affected departments in almost all colleges and universities. Hardin said he knew that it w
happening in other departments, but he thought English was suffering more than others.
Hardin was particularly concerned about relying on non-tenured, part-time instructors in place of full-time faculty.
Mary Burgan, general secretary for the American Association of University Professors, a higher education lobbying group based in Washington D.C., said her organization was concerned about the trend of using part-time instructors. It undermines the stability of faculties and the education provided, she said.
Burgan said that universities seemed to be affected by an ideology of cost reduction and were attempting to cash in by replacing faculty with cheaper temporary employees. Burgan said she did not think it was a conspiracy so much as a form of unconscious downsizing.
"It is much easier to go that way. It is an easy out," Burgan said, "I don't think universities are thinking hard enough about alternative solutions."
Strikwerda said the college was aware of these concerns and that it was college policy not to rely on part-time instructors and teaching assistants.
"We are going to do our best with very limited resources to increase the number of faculty positions, but it is going to depend on the situation from year to year," Strikwerda said.
Exam gets technology upgrade
Time is running out for students to test with pencil and paper
By Julie Sachs
Kansan staff writer
People trying to get accepted into graduate school will see some changes in the entrance exam.
recently took the computerized test and said that she did not like it.
The Graduate Record Exam's format is changing from a pencil-and-paper test into a computerized test.
"I felt it was really limiting," Votaw said.
During the next year, people will have the option of taking either version.
After that time, only the computerbased test will be offered, said Andrew Debicki. Dean of the Graduate School and International Programs
Rochelle Votaw, Lawrence senior.
One of the flaws of the computer test, Votaw said, was that once a question was answered it was impossible to go back and show them.
Debicki said.
back and change an answer.
She said that people who took the pencil-and-paper version were allowed to change their answers during each portion of the test.
The new test will have questions ranging from easy to difficult.
The computerized test is shorter but concentrates more on strengths. Debhicksaid.
A test-taker will receive increasing difficult questions until he answers a question incorrectly, Debicki said. Then he will receive easier questions.
"The math test now doesn't discriminate at the high end of the scale."
Andrew Debicki Graduate School Dean
Previously everyone taking the old version received the same questions. With the new format, each person may receive different sets of questions,
Scoring on the computer-based test will be based on the number of correctly answered questions and their difficulty, Debicki said. Answering difficult question
accurately will result in a better score than answering easy questions, he said.
Votaw said that she felt that the new test's scoring method was deceptive.
"I felt like I was doing fine, but when I got my score I did 100 points worse than
I did on the written practice test," Votaw said.
She blamed her poorer performance on her inability to use test-taking strategies designed for the pencil-and-paper test.
Debicki said that there were other planned changes for the test.
A numerical reasoning section is being created to replace the quantitative section for test-takers seeking to enter graduate programs requiring advanced mathematical knowledge.
"The math test now doesn't discriminate at the high end of the scale," he said.
A composition section will be added in about three years.
There also will be more test centers. One of the closest locations for students to take the test now is the Sylvan Learning Center in Topeka, but the University has been approved to have its own center, Debicki said.
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Section A • Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 22, 1998
Latina sorority plans active second year
By Beth Janes
Kansan staff writer
After its first year as a chapter sorority, Sigma Lambda Gamma continues to be the only Latina-based sorority at the University of Kansas , and its members have big plans for the future.
The idea to found Sigma Lambda Gamma began at a Hispanic American Leadership Organization meeting where a transfer student from Kansas State University talked about the sorority, said Aurora Marin, Leoti junior and SLG president.
Ten founding members completed the necessary steps designated by the Sigma Lambda Gamma National Board and became a chapter in September 1997.
"We had to become an interest group, then a colony and submit a packet with members' grades, our purposes and advisers. It was paperwork galore," Marin said. "When we found out we got it, we were so happy because it had taken almost a year."
Trina Ramirez, Lawrence graduate student and SLG adviser, said that she was impressed by the maturity level and enthusiasm of the founders because many were freshmen and sophomores.
"The sorority brings a lot to the University. The women will enhance the multicultural experience for all students," she said. "They have leadership and a pride of heritage that are contagious and electric. It opens doors for a stronger community on campus."
Marin said she hoped to see more women attend interest meetings this semester, but after inducting new members for the first time last semester, for a total of 17, she said the quantity of new members was not a big concern.
"Before we started, we had to
deal more with quantity. Now that we've been established, it doesn't matter if we cross over one or five. We are looking for quality women to represent the sorority." Marin said.
Several new activities are being planned for SLG's second year, Marin said. A philanthropy with the American Red Cross, working as Big Sisters, and helping new minority women with their studies are three of the activities planned.
"We want to establish a good network with the other fraternities and sororites," she said. "We'd also like to sponsor a conference for Latino and Latina Greeks from around the country. This would bridge gaps between the greeks, so we could work together."
Marin said that the sorority also was planning party nights at the Burge Union beginning on October 17 and a Gamma Week in November with different programs every night.
In the past year, SLG participated in a number of campus activities and community service projects. The women brought boxes of donated food and clothing to battered women's shelters and volunteered for Red Cross blood drives and with the Boys and Girls Club.
Community service is one of five principles that sorority members follow, including morals and ethics, academics social interaction, and cultural awareness. Members participate in one activity a month for each principle.
Ramirez said she looked forward to seeing the women's personalities evolve further as they interacted with one another to reach a higher on-campus profile.
"They are so excited about the sorority and their mission," she said. "They are working hard to carry out their scholarship and service."
Smartcards may do laundry
By Kristi Hartley
Kansan staff writer
The Department of Student Housing is busy preparing for students returning to residence halls in August.
Kansan staff writer
KUID functions will be converted to the smartcards beginning July 27.
"If everything works the way it's supposed to work, it would do everything their cards last year did," said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
Functions from the old card, such as entrance into the Ekdahl Dining Commons and after hours check-in at the residence halls, will be used
An added function for residence hall students is with the laundry machines. Students can pay to wash their clothes using the smartcard.
in the same way with the new smartcard. Stoner said.
To use the laundry machines with the smartcard, students have to put money on their card at the Card Center in the Kansas Union or any of the five cash-to-card machines on campus.
The machines are located in the Kansas and Burge unions, Wescoe Hall, Watson Library and Strong Hall, said Mary Ann Graham, University Card Center Manager.
Stoner said that if the card did not work in time for the fall semester, the department would issue students living in the residence halls a temporary card with the same functions as the old KUIDs.
Students will still be able to wash their laundry.
"Our backup on the laundry is we didn't take the coins off," Stoner said. "The first year we're running both arrangements."
Students also can take advantage of computer hookups and cable television in every residence hall
on campus beginning in the fall.
"Over the last few years, we've been trying to bring up ethernet or data connections in each of the residence halls." Stoner said.
Data connections were installed in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall and Hashinger Hall this summer. These were the two remaining residence halls without the data connections, Stoner said.
Prior to data connection installations, students had to use a modem on the telephone lines. Students could not use the computer and the telephone at the same time.
Skateboarding facility approved
Centennial Park arena set to open by this November
By Jenny Oakson
Kansan staff writer
LAWRENCE SKATE PARK
For Benjamin Tuttle, the proposed skate park in Centennial Park will be more than a place to have fun. It will represent a year and a half of hard work put in by himself and other area skateboarders.
Tuttle, Moraga, Calif., senior, was one of many audience members who applauded when the Lawrence City Commission approved a bid for the proposed Lawrence skate park at its meeting last night. The commission voted 3-1 to move ahead with the skate-park design by BG Consultants Inc.
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"We put everything we have into this project," Tuttle said. "We did the fund raising and helped with the schematic details — we've really earned it."
The skate park, which will include eight steel and concrete structures, is scheduled for completion by mid-November. Its location in Centennial Park, Sixth Street and Rockledge Road, will give Lawrence skateboarders an authorized arena which would replace makeshift skating facilities in areas such as Burcham Park.
"Iwas driving by the new swimming pool and saw about seven or eight kids skating on the basketball court with their own homemade obstacles," said Commissioner ErV Hodges. "I am satisfied with the fact that our kids will use this facility for a long time."
Commissioner Bob Moody had no applause for the project.
"We agreed to an $80,000 design," Moody said. "I cannot accept this project for $120,000, as it is."
A reason given for the increased price was the complex contracting necessary to ensure the park's longevity. Tuttle said that on-site moldings and special varieties of asphalt and concrete were necessary to ensure that the complex would withstand hard wear.
The park's proposed ten-foot, chain-link fence also drew debate. Paul Markham, a representative of the Sunset Hills Neighborhood Association, said that unless the fence would be locked to prevent skating after dark, it should be removed for aesthetic reasons.
"We need a fence with a skate park because there are going to be fast-moving skateboards that tend to get away from people, not to mention the nearby disc-golf field." Tuttle said. "Also, there will probably be spectators we need to protect."
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JUMP RIGHT INTO STUDENT SENATE
STUDENT SENATE IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITION OF EXCUTIVE SECRETARY FOR THE 1998-99 SCHOOL YEAR
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
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wednesday, July 22, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section A·Page 5
Hemenway peers into past
University history saved in portraits of former leaders
Chancellor Robert Hemenway discusses the portraits of former chancellors that recently were put up in the Chancellor's Suite. The portrait is of Larry Chalmers, chancellor from 1969 to 1972. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
By Duano Wagler
Kansan staff writer
Fifteen portraits of former University of Kansas chancellors now grace the chancellor's suite.
1985
The portraits were put on display June 29. Chancellor Robert Hemenway said that the collection helped provide a historical backdrop to the University's strong tradition.
"One of the things that you're always aware of as chancellor of KU is the rich tradition that you're a part of," he said.
Part of the tradition is chancellors with powerful personalities. Francis Snow, chancellor from 1890 to 1901, is an example. His portrait is considerably larger than the others.
"I've been told that this portrait is bigger because he said he wanted to have a bigger portrait than any of the others." Hemenway said.
He said that Snow solidified the governance of the University after 20 years of turmoil between the faculty and the state legislature.
The next chancellor, Frank Strong,
also provided inspiration. Hemen-
way said that before his own inauguration, he read the account of Strong's 1902 inauguration.
"It was a two or three day event," Hemenway said. "There were athletic competitions — there was a huge banquet."
Strong modernized the University. The modernization included joining the Association of American Universities. According to Fred Ellsworth's "Our Amazing Chancellors," membership forced the University to meet tougher standards in areas such as library facilities and graduate work.
Sometimes, a chancellor's vision of University improvement collided with a governor's austerity plan. Hemenway said that Franklin Murphy, chancellor from 1951 to 1960, battled Gov. George Docking about state support.
"Some of it was personality," Hemenway said. "Some of it was Murphy arguing for support of the University and Docking, being quite conservative fiscally, not providing it."
Weary of the battles, Murphy left to become chancellor of University of California at Los Angeles, Hemenway said.
He said that Murphy's legacy included improving the Spencer Museum of Art.
Some chancellors had more public difficulties than battles with governors. Larry Chalmers, chancellor from 1969 through 1972, had to face
Vietnam protests and the Kansas Union burning in April of 1970. After the burning, the National Guard was called and a curfew was imposed for three days. Hemenway said that Chalmers finally called a student meeting.
"He had a meeting in the football stadium of all students to decide whether or not they would have final exams," he said. "They decided not to have final exams, and they sent everybody home."
Roger Martin, communications coordinator for the office of research and public service, is writing placards for the portraits.
"Nobody could have come in at a worse time," he said.
He said Chalmers was stuck in a generation war during his tenure.
Hemenway said that the portraits served as a challenge.
"You're conscious of this tradition and how you want to try to live up to the standard that's been set," he said.
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The pieces were chosen from the Kansas Collection and the Wilcox Collection of Contemporary Political Movements.
Kennedy's assassination.
Also on display are a poster for the movie Easy Rider , a Black Panthers poster calling "Power to the People" and an advertisement for the birth-control pill.
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Exhibit encapsulates 1960s lifestyles
Psychedelic swirls and bold colors fill the glass cases, a backdrop as diverse as the materials in the exhibit.
Items were selected for their messages and their visual impact. Students interested in the time period will find the exhibit useful in comparing the societies of then and today, said Sheryl Williams, curator for Kansas collection.
The exhibit is meant to represent the wide spectrum of political and social movements, both conservative and liberal, that existed in the 1960s, said Lin Fredricksen, librarian.
Visitors to the Spencer Research Library can take an easy ride into the 1960s.
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The Spencer Research Library can be reached online at www.lib.ukans.edu.
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Kansas collection hours are Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturdays 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The collection is closed on Sundays.
Spencer Research Library is located behind Strong Hall. The Kansas collection is on the ground level.
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Part of the exhibit is a collection of personal memorabilia that University staff members donated for the show. It adds a personal element to the time period that makes it helpful to imagine what the '60s were like, Williams said.
By Elissa Harris
Rose
Movie posters, political newspapers, comic books and advertisements constitute the current exhibit in the library's Kansas collection.
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Kansan staff writer
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10
Section A • Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 22, 1998
1870s
The original structure is named "Liberty Hall" to reflect Lawrence's anti-slavery sentiments.
LIBERTY HALL
1900
Audiences attend performances by traveling theaters at the Bowersock Opera House.
LAMINGTON CUPRA
1930s
Liberty Hall operates as the Dickinson Theatre. The structure is the same as the current building.
A view of Massachusetts Street in front of Liberty Hall as seen in the 1800's. Contributed Photo.
THEATRE MADISON
Liberty Hall: An entertaining history
TAMPA STREET
Chamber of Commerce commemorates fixture of Massachusetts Street
By Robocca Ulanoff
Kansas staff writer
Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., has undergone many transformations — from a hardware store and office of the anti-slavery newspaper Herald of Freedom to an opera and a disco — in its 140-year history.
Still, entertainment, like the aforementioned concert, has remained and continues to be its essential purpose.
On June 30, members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Senior Council dedicated a plaque that commemorates Liberty Hall's role in Lawrence history. Liberty Hall was the first building to be dedicated by the Senior Council.
Gary Toebben, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said that the purpose of the project was to share Lawrence history with citizens and visitors and to point out where significant events had taken place.
Liberty Hall was dedicated in 1870 by a Rev. Bently, who also suggested its name, according to literature from the Watkins Community Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. In one version of the story, Bently suggested the name because some years earlier, Abraham Lincoln supposedly had called Lawrence the "cradle of liberty."
After the building was sacked and allegedly set on fire by a pro-slavery sheriff from nearby Lecompton, Liberty Hall was rebuilt on the ashes of the Herald of Freedom office in 1856 by Samuel Edwin Poole. Liberty Hall soon became the social and political core of frontier Kansas.
In the early 1800s, Liberty Hall was purchased by J.D. Bowersock, a
Lawrence mayor and eight-year congressman. Liberty Hall was renamed the Bowersock Opera House, which held theatrical and musical road shows until 1911, when a fire gutted the building.
In February 1912, the building was completed. Since then it has been a movie theater, a nightclub and an inn. In 1985, the building was purchased by Lawrence business owner David Millstein and the late Charlie Oldfather, an emeritus professor of law at the University of Kansas and a theater enthusiast. In 1986, it was renovated into the cosmic-themed building that stands today.
The present-day Liberty Hall has a
"Liberty Hall has been an entertainment center, whether live or manufactured, for most of its history."
Steve Jansen
170-seat capacity for concerts or private functions, two movie screens that show independent and foreign films, and an independent video store.
President of Watkins Community Museum of History
"Liberty Hall has been an entertainment center, whether live or manufactured, for most of its history," said Steve Jansen, president of Watkins Community Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St.
Jessie Branson, project coordinator for the Senior Council, said that the next buildings to be commemorated are the House Building, 729-731 Massachusetts St., location of The Bayleaf, and the Goldmaker building, 723-725 Massachusetts St.
The Liberty Hall web site address is
www.pilgrimppage.com/libertyhall.
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Kansas Summer Theatre '98
Don't miss this magical romantic fairy tale
Prelude to a Kiss
by Craig Lucas
Directed by John Staniunas
Directed by JOHN STANLEY
Scenic & Costume Design
by Dennis Christilles
Lighting Design by Ann Hockenberry-Hause
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
July 16,18,24,25,1998
All performances are at 8:00 p.m. in the Crafton Preyer Theatre For mature audiences.
Reserved seat tickets are on sale in the KU box offices:
Murphy Hall, 864-3982;
Lied Center, 864-ARTS;
SUA Office, 864-3477;
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daily kansan
wednesday
7.22.98
one.b
the university
One Student's life will become drastically different as she seeks to make a difference in other people's lives by becoming a teacher in...
SOUTH AFRICA
9
These South African students are attending class in an open-roofed building. Some of the country's schools are so crowded that classes must meet outside for students to have room to take notes. At this school, students do not attend class when it rains because there is no roof. Contributed Photo.
By Liz Wristen
Kansan staff writer
The ground is composed of rough dirt and thick weeds. The huts are made of mud and clay with thatched roofs. Water is scarce, and basic amenities are few.
This is Kathleen McGee's new home. McGee, a Kansas native and KU graduate student in English, will move to South Africa early next year and teach at a Christian school there
"A good education is very important for everyone, especially blacks." McGee said. "Education is vital to give blacks an equal opportunity."
Her destination is a mission 12 miles from the town of Tzaneen, South Africa. 21 hours by plane from Kansas.
McGee's impetus to move to South Africa came from a chance encounter in a restaurant with a South African couple. Japi and Wilna Venter had traveled to the United States seeking financial support for a project to dig wells in the South African homelands. Very little water is available there, McGee said.
Last June, McGee spent two weeks touring South Africa with the Venters.
"The homelands are such an amazing picture at sunrise," McGee said. "When I first arrived in South Africa, the land just appeared rolling toward the sun. Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful. I'll never forget that picture."
During her trip, she saw a sign in a restroom in Johannesburg, South Africa, that caused her to re-evaluate her life. It read, "Water is precious. Don't waste it!" She decided that she wanted to work in a less-developed country.
Her opportunity came when the Venters introduced McGee to Mr. Machaba, the tribal chief of the South African homelands. Machaba asked McGee to participate in a mission to rebuild the academic faculty in South African schools. The few schools that exist are overflowing with students.
Potholes in the floor and broken chairs make this South African classroom a rough place for studies. Its condition is representative of many South African classrooms. A lack of government funding and support for education has left many classrooms less than appealing for teachers and students. Missionary workers and teachers, such as Kathleen McGee, hope to change the poor education system in South Africa through volunteering their time and raising money. Contrib-Photo
At one school that McGee visited, the teacher had to bring the chalk.
[Image of an empty room with large windows and empty chairs.]
board outside because the school building was too crowded.
McGee accepted Machaba's offer and is trying to find other teachers who want to teach in South Africa.
"I have always had a tremendous heart for people who suffer," McGee said. "South Africa is a country where I can work to make a difference. I became a Christian as an adult, and I feel that by teaching at a Christian school, I can make a difference in these kids' lives. These are my people, my kids."
She will not be making the move alone. Her 12-year-old son, David, will come with her.
"When she first told me, I was really uncomfortable and upset because I thought we were only going for a year," he said. "When she told me we were going for good, in short, I had a fit because I wouldn't get to see my friends for awhile. Now I'm mostly excited about going. I'm going to try and help the little kids learn English."
McGee is letting David make the final decision about moving to South Africa. She said she would cance! the move if he became unsure about going. However, once they arrive in South Africa, there will be no turning back.
"He will learn to cope," McGee said.
"He's 12. He's halfway to being an adult. He will have to learn how to live there."
David will attend either a private Christian school or a public school where English is spoken, McGee said.
MICHAEL
Kathleen McGee, Lawrence graduate student,and her son, David, prepare to enjoy an American meal. They plan to move to South Africa early next year. McGee will teach English and other subjects. Contributed Photo
They will live in a tin-roofed brick home with no heating, air conditioning, microwave or cable. Although they will have water, pumped to their home, they will have to light a fire under a device outside the house to heat the water.
"Life will be hard," McGee said.
"But we will have to learn to adjust."
Housing and food will cost $300 to $400 a month. McGee has not begun soliciting funds for her trip, but she said she hoped to receive some support from the Mustard Seed Christian Church, 700 Wakarusa Drive, where she is a member.
University representatives to go overseas
South America sites chosen for recruiting
Representatives from the University of Kansas will travel to South America next September with a new mission: to recruit international students.
By Mariana Paiva
Kansan Staff Writer
Elizabeth Soppelsa, director of the Applied English Center, and Sam Somerville, assistant director of International Student Services, will represent the University for the first time at the Study USA Fair.
The KU representatives' goal is to show prospective students the benefits of studying abroad and coming to the University.
This institution has helped American universities recruit overseas students for more than 25 years.
Because of the cost of the trip, the representatives will only stop in three cities. Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo in Brazil.
and Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Previously, the University relied on its foreign students to encourage their relatives and friends to come to the University of Kansas, she said. Five years ago, several departments started to work together mailing catalogs and brochures to advising centers throughout the world.
"We chose Brazil and Argentina because in both countries there are a high number of families that could afford paying for a study abroad program," Soppela said.
Two years ago. Soppelsa and Gerald Harris, former director of International Student Services, visited several embassies in Washington, D.C., to talk about the University and how to reach international students.
Elizabeth Soppelsa
"Before the University did not have to work hard to have international students. Now we are competing inside the United States, with other English speaking countries, like Australia for example and within the state," Soppeela said. "Wichita State has been sending people abroad for
"We chose Brazil and Argentina because in both countries there are a high number of families that could afford paying for a study abroad program."
Director of Applied English Center
more than 10 years now."
Alan Cerveny, director of admissions and the International Recruiting Committee coordinator, said that since fall 1997, the committee has met regularly to discuss how to improve the number of international students on campus and create faculty awareness about the importance of recruiting international students.
In 1993, the number of international students enrolled at the University was 1,992. That number has decreased to 1,700 in 1998.
"The University does not have a specific numeric number to achieve," Cerveny said. "We want to turn around the trend and see increases in the international
numbers."
Sommerville said besides helping to create a multicultural community on campus, international students spend an average of $25,000 per year paying for their expenses.
Sommerville will help students with advising questions in English, Spanish and Portuguese.
"We have to explain in a clear manner, and it is unreasonable to expect all the students to speak English," Sommerville said.
He said that international students interested in being KU ambassadors for their countries can ask for brochures and catalogs at the International Student Services Office at 2 Strong Hall.
Commentary Living abroad gives glimpse into global differences
This summer I have learned about issues such as the merits and disadvantages of westernization, the politics fueling nuclear proliferation and the situations of women and minorities in a less developed country.
These issues shed some light on the plight of the third world, but they are only a few scattered pieces of the big picture of a nation's people. I have reaped the benefits of conducting research on many of the social, political and economic aspects of Pakistani society, but my favorite moments have not been academic or professional.
It hits me when I'm sitting on a straw cot in front of a grubby street stall from which I just purchased the 50-cent lentil and bread dinner. I'm relishing an open-air market. It hits me when I'm riding home in a rickshaw a colorful, muffler-less, three-wheeled taxi that can only reach 30 miles per hour.
Nadia
Mustafa
editor@kansan.com
What hits me? It's
is an almost indescribable sense of universality, a glimpse into global differences and our unfortunate isolation as westerners. It is more than that. It is the sensation of being in a place comparatively so less developed and so culturally unique but so admirable.
I can only ride in a rickshaw or eat on a dirty straw cot here among people whose way of life is so different from my own. Despite the long list of physical inconveniences and societal frustrations, Pakistan culture has a down-to-earth charm. Beyond the chaotic, congested traffic and the pleading faces of beggars are streets filled with decent people trying to earn a living against all odds imposed by a corrupt government and a harsh global economy.
We can discuss poverty, corruption and a lack of education from our comfortable seats in an advanced western society, but one glance at a skinny child selling newspapers on the street corner makes it real. These people seem more real to me.
Islamabad
Afghanistan
Iran
Saudi Arabia
Karachi
India
AREA OF DETAIL
Indian Ocean
M.D. Bradshaw/KANSA
1
In spite of new hardships adding to the old ones, life keeps going in Pakistani cities, villages, slums, streets and homes. Pakistanis are not ignorant to the fact that they are a third world people, but that does not hinder their national pride. They retain a strong sense of moral and cultural tradition that is not struggling to survive like American baseball and apple pie.
Whether depravity and tradition are real is a matter of perspective, but a Pakistani shopkeeper in a dusty alley cannot imagine the post-materialist era the West is enjoying. The destruction of the ozone layer or the merits of affirmative action are the last things on his mind. He is just worried about putting food on his table and sending his children to school.
I wish American schoolchildren could take field trips to regions like Pakistan instead of the local zoo. We can learn so much about ourselves by living among people from other backgrounds. The purpose of traveling is not to see the Eiffel Tower or the Great Wall of China, but to deepen our understanding of other cultures. I've been to Pakistan several times and many things have become familiar, but each time, I view its people and institutions from a different angle and gain a higher level of sympathetic comprehension. Each time, I shed a layer of ignorance. I think.
It is impossible to categorize Pakistanis. They range from rich to poor, educated to uneducated and conservative to liberal. But they all share a common bond — the society they live in and the culture they are accustomed to. Through much careful observation, for me the terms less developed country and third world are not just textbook glossary definitions anymore.
Mustafa is a Topека sophomore in English and journalism.
2B
Quick Looks
Wednesday July 22,1998
HOROSCOPES
Today's Birthday (July 22)
Learn to serve others this year without getting walked on, and you win. Past obligations cause pressure in August. Are you on the right path? If not, change it by September.
Arles (March 21-April 19) - Today is a 5.
If you need to ask for money this morning, be respectful. Make sure your boots are polished, and you have all the facts at your fingertips. An expedition this afternoon or evening leads to starting new information.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) - Today is am 8.
Acquiesce gracefully to your partner's demands. There is no use arguing, but a subtle ploy might work. Try not to spend too much of the household money. If your partner wants something expensive, suggest that he or she chip in extra for it.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is a 6.
Concentrate on your work this morning. Old business must be completed before the day ends. Entice yourself to greater efficiency by promising an evening of fun and frlic. Your most outrageous partner would love to play.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) - Today is am 8.
Smoldering embers may rekindle today. Watch out, i are you anywhere near an old flame. Do not make any plans tonight because you are going to be too busy. A job you have already promised and new assignments will take up more time than you have.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 6.
You may be stuck in the mud for most of the day.
Struggling only makes it worse. To win this game, you are going to have to outsmart the opposition. Tonight, stop talking trivia. Your sweetheart has something significant to discuss.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is an 8.
Cram your head full of knowledge this morning. You will need as much as you can gather to solve a domestic problem tonight. You will have to figure out the clues to get the right answer.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 5.
No need to panic if money is tight. Discuss the matter in private with a wealthier person. Look for another source of income, not another loan. A secret revealed tonight will steer you in the right direction.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 9.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is a 7.
Obligations weigh heavy on your shoulders this morning. A private consultation helps you understand what has been happening behind the scenes. Make choices carefully. There may be hidden consequences. Meditate on recent developments this evening and relax.
Your power is beginning to wane slightly. Seize this opportunity to wrap up as many deals as possible. Do not start new enterprises. Wait until later in the week. Sell instead of buy. Clean out your closets and get rid of stuff you have outgrown.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Today is a 7.
Wrap up a project you have been working on with friends. People will be in a decisive mood, so it will be easier to go through the material. Either do each job, reschedule it or scratch it off your list. There is no more time to think about it.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 6.
An older person attempts to dominate you. If you share a common goal, go along quietly. If the other person is headed in the wrong direction, use a diversionary tactic. Reinforcements arrive tonight.
2
II
C
LION
University promotes itself across Kansas
SPORTS BRIEFS
In the 1970s, groups such as the Endowment Association, Alumni Association and Athletics Department began visiting about 10 to 20 Kansas cities every summer to answer questions and to promote upcoming events.
Every summer, representatives from the University of Kansas send people on a tour of Kansas, promoting the University.
The event consists primarily of evening meetings with a dinner, a social hour and a guest speaker. The University targets alumni and season ticket holders, but the events are open to the public.
"It's a payback to alums and fans who visit us 20 to 25 times a year," said Scott McMichael, director of the Williams Fund, the source of athletic scholarship money. "We go to their backyard and bring the University to them."
LAUTORAT DE LA RHESIA
The Athletics Department uses the event to promote season football tickets and the Williams Fund.
The event also is used to highlight head coaching changes. Roy Williams toured during his rookie season as did Derry Allen. This summer, baseball coach Bobby Randall was able to visit Garden City and Kansas City, Kan.
"What's fun is to see great KU fans out there and their enthusiasm," Randall said.
These events are not utilized as money making tools.
Basketball team guards Sunflower games title
The Ninth Annual Sunflower State Games, an amateur sports event for Kansans, kicked off July 17 and will run through this weekend.
One of the events was 19-and-old men's basketball.
The defending champions, Doc's Jocks, features Sean Pearson, University of Kansas alumnus; Nick Bradford, Kansas; Manny Dies, Kansas State; Derek Hood, Arkansas; and Aaron Butter and Maurice Trotter, former Lawrence High
SCORPIO
School play.
MUSLOWER
WESTERN JORDAN
ers.
The team's first game was a 72-
61 victory against
Mortgage
Plus.
Butler stole the show by scoring 18 points on seven of 10 shooting, including four of five from three-point range.
The team's streak continued into Saturday as they defeated the Topeka Hornets 88-57 and Beloit 61-31. Both games ended in mercy calls when Doc'S jocks jumped ahead by 30 points. The victories sent the team into Sunday's playoff games.
Bradford contributed 16 points on eight of 15 shooting.
On the final day of the tournament, the Jocks beat Wyatt 69-61 and then Topeka's AAA-Kansas en route to the team's championship victory over Bethel-Pyle 77-57.
KU golf standout wins amateur championship
Doc's Jocks retained their title.
Chris Thompson, Independence senior, swig his way to his first Kansas Amateur men's golf championship Sunday.
Thompson and his closest competitor, Ron Brewer, a 52-year-old from Leawood, exchanged leads several times throughout the 36-hole match at the Wichita Country Club.
After 18 holes, they were tied, and neither ever trailed by more than one stroke.
The match went into sudden death
A
X
KU
golf
overtime. Thompson won when Brewer missed his final putt by inches.
羊
At the University, Thompson, an NCAA All-American, led the team with a 72.7 stroke average. He competed in 14 tournaments last season and
finished seventh or better in 10.
Walk-on quarterback may get scholarship
Jake Letourneau of Concordia turned down several scholarship offers to walk on as a Jayhawk redshirt.
The 6-foot-2-inch, 195 pound quar
terback was promised a scholarship for fall of 1999 but might receive money this fall because of the loss of back-up Quarterback
Letourneau, after three seasons as a starter at Concordia, was a third-team all-class all-starter and an all-class 4A pick as a senior.
KU
In his senior season, Letourneau threw for 1,610 yards and 13 touchdowns.
Akili Roberson for academic reasons.
He will report to practice on August 5 with first year scholarship and preferred walk-on players.
—Melinda Weaver
NFL to pull uniform out of anti-gay ads
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Reggie White appeared in another anti-gay ad yester
day and again was pictured in his Green Bay Packers uniform, a violation of NFL policy.
The ad, paid for by a coalition of 15 Christian groups, appeared in The Washington Times and ran in USA Today.
unsure of whom to contact, said NFL representative Greg Aiello. A representative of the country's largest gay and lesbian political organization said the ad's sponsors should have changed their advertisement even without NFL warning. "Clearly, they knew that the NFI
White and the ad's sponsors had not yet been warned to stop using the unauthorized photo because the NFL was
White: NFL wants him out of uniform in ads.
---
Bill Hom, a White family representative who has handled questions about the ad campaign, did not immediately return phone messages yesterday.
White declined to comment after practice yesterday.
did not want them to use his picture, but they had every intention of using it until the very end," said David Smith, a representative for the Human Rights Campaign, based in Washington, D.C.
Aiello said the league was confident White and the ad's sponsors would comply with the NFL order to stop picturing White in uniform.
The ad documented criticism White said he had received for speaking out against homosexuality, which he first did in a speech to Wisconsin lawmakers in March.
Bob Harlan, Green Bay Packers president, faxed a letter of apology to Elizabeth Birch, executive director of the Human Rights Campaign, yesterday.
The Associated Press
SPORTS CALENDAR
Wednesday
Baseball Schedule
American League
Detroit at N.Y. Yankees 1:05 p.m.
Boston at Cleveland 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Parque 2-2) at Toronto (Clemens 11-6), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle at Tampa Bay 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore 7:35 p.m.
Texas at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Anhela at Minnesota, 8:05 p.m.
Thursday
Anaheim at Minnesota; 1:15 p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Boston, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 7:35 p.m.
Texas at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
National League Wednesday
St. Louis at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Pulisher 0-0 and Nomo 3-8) at
Florida at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:35 p.m.
Montreal at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Colorado, 9:05 p.m.
Houston at Los Angeles, 10:35 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego , 10:35 p.m.
Thursday
N.Y. Mets at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
Montreal at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
St. Louis at San Francisco, 3:35 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego, 5:05 p.m.
Florida at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Alanta at Philadelphia, 7:35 p.m.
Houston at Los Angeles, 10:05 p.m.
Beating the heat
A speed boat takes off out of Clinton Lake boat dock. Temperatures have reached 100 degrees during the past week, and the heat should continue for awhile. Photo by Lizz Weber/KANSAN
Abdiana
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622. 623. 624. 625. 626. 627. 628. 629. 630. 631. 632. 633. 634. 635. 636. 637. 638. 639. 640. 641. 642. 643. 644. 645. 646. 647. 648. 649. 650. 651. 652. 653. 654. 655. 656. 657. 658. 659. 660. 661. 662. 663. 664. 665. 666. 667. 668. 669. 670. 671. 672. 673. 674. 675. 676. 677. 678. 679. 680. 681. 682. 683. 684. 685. 686. 687. 688. 689. 690. 691. 692. 693. 694. 695. 696. 697. 698. 699. 700. 701. 702. 703. 704. 705. 706. 707. 708. 709. 710. 711. 712. 713. 714. 715. 716. 717. 718. 719. 720. 721. 722. 723. 724. 725. 726. 727. 728. 729. 730. 731. 732. 733. 734. 735. 736. 737. 738. 739. 740. 741. 742. 743. 744. 745. 746. 747. 748. 749. 750. 751. 752. 753. 754. 755. 756. 757. 758. 759. 760. 761. 762. 763. 764. 765. 766. 767. 768. 769. 770. 771. 772. 773. 774. 775. 776. 777. 778. 779. 780. 781. 782. 783. 784. 785. 786. 787. 788. 789. 790. 791. 792. 793. 794. 795. 796. 797. 798. 799. 800. 801. 802. 803. 804. 805. 806. 807. 808. 809. 810. 811. 812. 813. 814. 815. 816. 817. 818. 819. 820. 821. 822. 823. 824. 825. 826. 827. 828. 829. 830. 831. 832. 833. 834. 835. 836. 837. 838. 839. 840. 841. 842. 843. 844. 845. 846. 847. 848. 849. 850. 851. 852. 853. 854. 855. 856. 857. 858. 859. 860. 861. 862. 863. 864. 865. 866. 867. 868. 869. 870. 871. 872. 873. 874. 875. 876. 877. 878. 879. 880. 881. 882. 883. 884. 885. 886. 887. 888. 889. 890. 891. 892. 893. 894. 895. 896. 897. 898. 899. 900. 901. 902. 903. 904. 905. 906. 907. 908. 909. 910. 911. 912. 913. 914. 915. 916. 917. 918. 919. 920. 921. 922. 923. 924. 925. 926. 927. 928. 929. 930. 931. 932. 933. 934. 935. 936. 937. 938. 939. 940. 941. 942. 943. 944. 945. 946. 947. 948. 949. 950. 951. 952. 953. 954. 955. 956. 957. 958. 959. 960. 961. 962. 963. 964. 965. 966. 967. 968. 969. 970. 971. 972. 973. 974. 975. 976. 977. 978. 979. 980. 981. 982. 983. 984. 985. 986. 987. 988. 989. 990. 991. 992. 993. 994. 995. 996. 997. 998. 999. 1000. 1001. 1002. 1003. 1004. 1005. 1006. 1007. 1008. 1009. 1010. 1011. 1012. 1013. 1014. 1015. 1016. 1017. 1018. 1019. 1020. 1021. 1022. 1023. 1024. 1025. 1026. 1027. 1028. 1029. 1030. 1031. 1032. 1033. 1034. 1035. 1036. 1037. 1038. 1039. 1040. 1041. 1042. 1043. 1044. 1045. 1046. 1047. 1048. 1049. 1050. 1051. 1052. 1053. 1054. 1055. 1056. 1057. 1058. 1059. 1060. 1061. 1062. 1063. 1064. 1065. 1066. 1067. 1068. 1069. 1070. 1071. 1072. 1073. 1074. 1075. 1076. 1077. 1078. 1079. 1080. 1081. 1082. 1083. 1084. 1085. 1086. 1087. 1088. 1089. 1090. 1091. 1092. 1093. 1094. 1095. 1096. 1097. 1098. 1099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1110. 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. 1117. 1118. 1119. 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 1133. 1134. 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138. 1139. 1140. 1141. 1142. 1143. 1144. 1145. 1146. 1147. 1148. 1149. 1150. 1151. 1152. 1153. 1154. 1155. 1156. 1157. 1158. 1159. 1160. 1161. 1162. 1163. 1164. 1165. 1166. 1167. 1168. 1169. 1170. 1171. 1172. 1173. 1174. 1175. 1176. 1177. 1178. 1179. 1180. 1181. 1182. 1183. 1184. 1185. 1186. 1187. 1188. 1189. 1190. 1191. 1192. 1193. 1194. 1195. 1196. 1197. 1198. 1199. 2000. 2001. 2002. 2003. 2004. 2005. 2006. 2007. 2008. 2009. 2010. 2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. 2021. 2022. 2023. 2024. 2025. 2026. 2027. 2028. 2029. 2030. 2031. 2032. 2033. 2034. 2035. 2036. 2037. 2038. 2039. 2040. 2041. 2042. 2043. 2044. 2045. 2046. 2047. 2048. 2049. 2050. 2051. 2052. 2053. 2054. 2055. 2056. 2057. 2058. 2059. 2060. 2061. 2062. 2063. 2064. 2065. 2066. 2067. 2068. 2069. 2070. 2071. 2072. 2073. 2074. 2075. 2076. 2077. 2078. 2079. 2080. 2081. 2082. 2083. 2084. 2085. 2086. 2087. 2088. 2089. 2090. 2091. 2092. 2093. 2094. 2095. 2096. 2097. 2098. 2099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1110. 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. 1117. 1118. 1119. 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 1133. 1134. 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138. 1139. 1140. 1141. 1142. 1143. 1144. 1145. 1146. 1147. 1148. 1149. 1150. 1151. 1152. 1153. 1154. 1155. 1156. 1157. 1158. 1159. 1160. 1161. 1162. 1163. 1164. 1165. 1166. 1167. 1168. 1169. 1170. 1171. 1172. 1173. 1174. 1175. 1176. 1177. 1178. 1179. 1180. 1181. 1182. 1183. 1184. 1185. 1186. 1187. 1188. 1189. 1190. 1191. 1192. 1193. 1194. 1195. 1196. 1197. 1198. 1199. 2000. 2001. 2002. 2003. 2004. 2005. 2006. 2007. 2008. 2009. 2010. 2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. 2021. 2022. 2023. 2024. 2025. 2026. 2027. 2028. 2029. 2030. 2031. 2032. 2033. 2034. 2035. 2036. 2037. 2038. 2039. 2040. 2041. 2042. 2043. 2044. 2045. 2046. 2047. 2048. 2049. 2050. 2051. 2052. 2053. 2054. 2055. 2056. 2057. 2058. 2059. 2060. 2061. 2062. 2063. 2064. 2065. 2066. 2067. 2068. 2069. 2070. 2071. 2072. 2073. 2074. 2075. 2076. 2077. 2078. 2079. 2080. 2081. 2082. 2083. 2084. 2085. 2086. 2087. 2088. 2089. 2090. 2091. 2092. 2093. 2094. 2095. 2096. 2097. 2098. 2099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1110. 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. 1117. 1118. 1119. 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 1133. 1134. 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138. 1139. 1140. 1141. 1142. 1143. 1144. 1145. 1146. 1147. 1148. 1149. 1150. 1151. 1152. 1153. 1154. 1155. 1156. 1157. 1158. 1159. 1160. 1161. 1162. 1163. 1164. 1165. 1166. 1167. 1168. 1169. 1170. 1171. 1172. 1173. 1174. 1175. 1176. 1177. 1178. 1179. 1180. 1181. 1182. 1183. 1184. 1185. 1186. 1187. 1188. 1189. 1190. 1191. 1192. 1193. 1194. 1195. 1196. 1197. 1198. 1199. 2000. 2001. 2002. 2003. 2004. 2005. 2006. 2007. 2008. 2009. 2010. 2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. 2021. 2022. 2023. 2024. 2025. 2026. 2027. 2028. 2029. 2030. 2031. 2032. 2033. 2034. 2035. 2036. 2037. 2038. 2039. 2040. 2041. 2042. 2043. 2044. 2045. 2046. 2047. 2048. 2049. 2050. 2051. 2052. 2053. 2054. 2055. 2056. 2057. 2058. 2059. 2060. 2061. 2062. 2063. 2064. 2065. 2066. 2067. 2068. 2069. 2070. 2071. 2072. 2073. 2074. 2075. 2076. 2077. 2078. 2079. 2080. 2081. 2082. 2083. 2084. 2085. 2086. 2087. 2088. 2089. 2090. 2091. 2092. 2093. 2094. 2095. 2096. 2097. 2098. 2099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1110. 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. 1117. 1118. 1119. 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 1133. 1134. 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138. 1139. 1140. 1141. 1142. 1143. 1144. 1145. 1146. 1147. 1148. 1149. 1150. 1151. 1152. 1153. 1154. 1155. 1156. 1157. 1158. 1159. 1160. 1161. 1162. 1163. 1164. 1165. 1166. 1167. 1168. 1169. 1170. 1171. 1172. 1173. 1174. 1175. 1176. 1177. 1178. 1179. 1180. 1181. 1182. 1183. 1184. 1185. 1186. 1187. 1188. 1189. 2000. 2001. 2002. 2003. 2004. 2005. 2006. 2007. 2008. 2009. 2010. 2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. 2021. 2022. 2023. 2024. 2025. 2026. 2027. 2028. 2029. 2030. 2031. 2032. 2033. 2034. 2035. 2036. 2037. 2038. 2039. 2040. 2041. 2042. 2043. 2044. 2045. 2046. 2047. 2048. 2049. 2050. 2051. 2052. 2053. 2054. 2055. 2056. 2057. 2058. 2059. 2060. 2061. 2062. 2063. 2064. 2065. 2066. 2067. 2068. 2069. 2070. 2071. 2072. 2073. 2074. 2075. 2076. 2077. 2078. 2079. 2080. 2081. 2082. 2083. 2084. 2085. 2086. 2087. 2088. 2089. 2090. 2091. 2092. 2093. 2094. 2095. 2096. 2097. 2098. 2099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1110. 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. 1117. 1118. 1119. 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 1133. 1134. 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138. 1139. 1140. 1141. 1142. 1143. 1144. 1145. 1146. 1147. 1148. 1149. 1150. 1151. 1152. 1153. 1154. 1155. 1156. 1157. 1158. 1159. 1160. 1161. 1162. 1163. 1164. 1165. 1166. 1167. 1168. 1169. 2000. 2001. 2002. 2003. 2004. 2005. 2006. 2007. 2008. 2009. 2010. 2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. 2021. 2022. 2023. 2024. 2025. 2026. 2027. 2028. 2029. 2030. 2031. 2032. 2033. 2034. 2035. 2036. 2037. 2038. 2039. 2040. 2041. 2042. 2043. 2044. 2045. 2046. 2047. 2048. 2049. 2050. 2051. 2052. 2053. 2054. 2055. 2056. 2057. 2058. 2059. 2060. 2061. 2062. 2063. 2064. 2065. 2066. 2067. 2068. 2069. 2070. 2071. 2072. 2073. 2074. 2075. 2076. 2077. 2078. 2079. 2080. 2081. 2082. 2083. 2084. 2085. 2086. 2087. 2088. 2089. 2090. 2091. 2092. 2093. 2094. 2095. 2096. 2097. 2098. 2099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1110. 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. 1117. 1118. 1119. 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 1133. 1134. 1135. 1136. 1137. 1138. 1139. 2000. 2001. 2002. 2003. 2004. 2005. 2006. 2007. 2008. 2009. 2010. 2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. 2021. 2022. 2023. 2024. 2025. 2026. 2027. 2028. 2029. 2030. 2031. 2032. 2033. 2034. 2035. 2036. 2037. 2038. 2039. 2040. 2041. 2042. 2043. 2044. 2045. 2046. 2047. 2048. 2049. 2050. 2051. 2052. 2053. 2054. 2055. 2056. 2057. 2058. 2059. 2060. 2061. 2062. 2063. 2064. 2065. 2066. 2067. 2068. 2069. 2070. 2071. 2072. 2073. 2074. 2075. 2076. 2077. 2078. 2079. 2080. 2081. 2082. 2083. 2084. 2085. 2086. 2087. 2088. 2089. 2090. 2091. 2092. 2093. 2094. 2095. 2096. 2097. 2098. 2099. 1100. 1101. 1102. 1103. 1104. 1105. 1106. 1107. 1108. 1109. 1110. 1111. 1112. 1113. 1114. 1115. 1116. 1117. 1118. 1119. 1120. 1121. 1122. 1123. 1124. 1125. 1126. 1127. 1128. 1129. 1130. 1131. 1132. 113
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There are other candidates, but...
J. W. H.
Dan Neuenswander State Board of Education
M. JOHNSON
Bill Graves Governor of Kansas
...this is the Mainstream Team.
Wednesday, July 22, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 3
Hilltop children are licensed to build cars
Parade displays vehicles created by imaginations
By Graham K. Johnson Kansan staff writer
When 8-year-old Anna Kuczera gets her first driver's license , she will probably drive a car that is dull compared to the one she
owns now.
Kuczera, a member of Hilltop Child Development Center's Gold Room class, showed off her "Fiddlin' Flower Fun" car in front of Watson Library last Friday. The homemade toy car is purple with flowers adorning the sides and wheels.
Kuczera is one of 18 children from Hilltop who staged the parade of toy cars they made from juice boxes and electrical wire spools. A local resident's
Kuzcera said she enjoyed making her car, which features a miniature Barbie doll hidden in one of the flowers.
actual art car inspired the creation of the toy cars.
Hilltop Child Development Centers Gold Room class enjoy the shade as they display their toy cars. The toy card parade was held last Friday as a class project.
Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
"When you go into this car, it's very fun because there are lots of fun things like little flowers and shrinking girls," Kuzcera said.
21
Jack Hood, a class instructor, said the children spent about six weeks making their cars.
Golden said that she sparked the children's interest in designing the cars by having Jones show his art car to the class.
Nancy Golden, the other class instructor, said she came up with the idea from the annual Art Togeau Art Car Parade, held each May to display Lawrence's most decorated cars. Art Togeau is sponsored by Lawrence resident Charles Jones.
Hood said that the class does a special project every summer or takes field trips. He said that the process of making the art cars probably benefited the children more than the average field trip.
"I think that they get more out of this than many other things because they formulate a plan in
"I think that they get more out of this than many other things because they formulate a plan in their heads,pick stuff out to use for it,and put it all together."
Jack Hood Class instructor at Hilltop
their heads, pick stuff out to use for it and put it all together."
Ryan Towns, 8, made a car that has a decoy camera and a secret camera for spying. Towns calls it the "Crasher."
Charles Jones, sponsor of the Art Togeau contest and candidate for the Douglas County Commission, said that the event taught the kids the importance of art.
"It's important to have creativity and beauty in your life," Jones said. "It's also important to have fun."
Jones said that message was an easy sell to the group of 7 and 8-year-olds.
"For kids that age, you don't have to convince them of this. They just want to do it," Jones said.
LA MARQUEE DE L'ORLEANS
Hallie Rombach, 7, rests in front of her toy art car. Rombach, a member of Hilltop Child Development Center's Gold Room class, made her car as part of a class project. Photo by Graham K. Johnson/KANSAN
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53 Minute - $10
107 Minute - $20
PRICES EFFECTIVE
JULY '98
SUN MON TUES WED THUR FRI SAT
26 27 28
22 23 24 25
Section B · Page 4
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 22, 1998
Discounts on
The Kwon Do,
Cardio Kick Boxing
Classes
NEW LAB FITNESS
Family Center
2500 9th St. +841-8200
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For all your repair needs"
* Import and Domestic
Auto Repair
* Machine Shop Service
* Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
---
arnette
BRIKO
TERRAPLANE
Glasses
9th & Iowa
Moving out of an apartment?
Complete an apartment checkout with your landlord.
Legal Services for Students
Jo Hardesty, Director 148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
HairExperts Design Team
First Time visit
you'll receive
$10.00 off any
one service.
New clients only
expires 8-22-98
4D
Not used with any other promotion or childcare benefits
25th & Iowa
A
Party Rates
KARMIC LINK
Astrology & Tarot
(785) 331-2606
Gift Certificates
$1.25 Jumbo Refills!
$2.50 Jumbo Margaritas!
EVERYTHING BUT ICE BEDS·DESKS·BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS unclaimed freight &
damaged merchandise 936 Mass.
Tues & Thurs: All Draft Beer $1.25
Fri & Sat: $1.25 Refills on Jumbo Souvenir Cups
There's a reason every day to come to the Sports Page Brewery!
WEDNESDAYS WON'T BE THE SAME AGAIN
Sports Page Brewery
A Great Place To Eat
CLINTON PARKWAY & KASOLED • 832-9600 • OPEN DAILY FROM 11 A.M. - 2 A.M.
BRIAN MURRAY
25th & Iowa
The Mid-West's Most Elite Juice Bar
Juicers
Showgirls
Who needs alcohol when you've got US?
★ WEDNESDAY'S STUDENT NIGHT:
$3.00 ADMISSION WITH KUID
★ 20 NUDE DANCERS
★ BACHELOR, GROUP &
FRATERNITY PARTIES
(GROUP DISCOUNT)
913 N. 2nd ST.
841-4122
SIZZORS INC.
Sizzors welcomes long-time resident, friend and stylist back to Lawrence.
Massage relieves tired minds
Laurie Sommer
Evening appointments available
749-4499
Benefits go beyond loosening muscles proponents claim
By Leslie Potter
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas students seeking rejuvenation might want to consider getting a massage.
910 Kentucky (behind Auto Glass)
Kathie Dragon, massage therapist at Mass. Street Message Therapy, 9271/2 Massachusetts St., said massage therapy was ideal for students because it healed stress.
"When your mind is stressed, your body is stressed," Dragan said. "A massage relaxes your body, so it also relaxes your mind."
She said massage therapy was similar to preventive medicine. Drager charges $40 per hour for a massage.
"If you are looking for a change get a massage," Dragen said "You'll feel like a new person."
hearing touch,
Paugh said, "You
heal the body
through touching muscles and
this in turn heals
the mind."
The Lunaria Holistic Health Center, 11011/2 Massachusetts St., offers massage therapy, acupuncture, tarot and astrology readings and Yoga and Tai Chi classes.
Paugh said massage therapy benefited students because it increased mental clarity.
500 hours of training."
Curtis Maendele,
therapist for 20 years,
works out of his
"If you are looking for a change, then get a message."
"Massage is a healing touch,"
Kathie Dragen massage therapist
"We have a professional atmosphere," said Karen Paugh, massage therapist at the Center. "We have eight massage therapists, and we require that they each have at least
home and makes house calls. His phone number is 841-3188.
"I worked on many students last semester during midterms and finals," Maendele said. "Later they told me they had never done so well on their finals."
Listeners get 'on air' experience during station's Breakfast Club
By Tiffany Harrington Kansan staff writer
Welcome to the Breakfast Club. Except it's not the brat pack in detention; there's no crying and no makeovers. Instead it's just plain Dave and Mackenzie in the Z95 studio in Overland Park.
As a guest to the Breakfast Club, I joined the morning crew during their Friday broadcast. Joel Nichols, a Channel 9 meteorologist, imitated Jerry Lewis, while a guy nicknamed Hammerhead attempted to read the news.
The switchboard did not look as overwhelming as something out of a Howard Stern studio. The disc jockeys only used two computers for prompting commercials, announcements and music. The Monday and Tuesday editions of The Kansas City Star lay on a desk with cans of Fat Free Pringles and a magazine article on what
"This is a great chance for people who want to experience radio," said Elaine Lyons, marketing director for Z95. "How many people do you know can say they've actually been inside a studio like this?"
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
INFO
If you would like to visit the Breakfast Club, contact Elaine at (913) 696-3700.
I was accompanied by seven other club visitors, or "clubbies," ranging from ages 12 to 24. Everyone had received their chance to visit the Dave and Mackenzie show by signing up in drawings or by just being regular listeners.
men's underwear says about their personalities.
"I was at a bar," said Kim Zahn, Emporia State graduate and pre-school teacher. "They were there doing a show and having contests. They called my name and so, here I am."
Lyons said that random listeners and contest drawing entries are kept in a database of more than 60,000 names. Lyons, a University graduate, said she chose 12 people every week to visit the Breakfast Club.
"It's random," Lyons said. "But people should feel free to call in and get their group to visit us. We have groups from schools all the time and their ages range from anywhere from seven years old and up."
The image provided is too low resolution and lacks any visible text or discernible features to accurately recognize and transcribe it. Therefore, no such content can be extracted from this image.
Clubbies can volunteer to read news casts, sports, weather or just have a conversation with one of the DJs. Teresa Atkins, 12, volunteered her services to help read an announcement.
"Sometimes people come in and are real quiet," said Alan Carr, a KU graduate. "And then we wonder if they had a good time or not. But then some groups are really vocal."
The Breakfast Club slowly dispersed to the smell of smoked ribs around 8:15 a.m. Dave was testing some of Kansas City's famous racks.
If you would like to visit the Breakfast Club, contact Elaine at (913) 696-3700.
See you fall semester
UNIVERSITY OF MIDLANDS
1846
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
*
Largest Oakley selection in Midwest!
O
KEY
- backpacks
* hats
* polo shirts
* t-shirts
* replacement lenses
* ear and nose pieces
* cases
* bags
LAWRENCE
Sportcenter
KANSAS
840 Massachusetts
842-NIKE (6453)
Special orders at no extra charge!
Y
1015 Personals
1020 Business Personals
1025 On Campus
1030 Announcements
125 Travel
126 Entertainment
1400 Lost and Found
100s Announcements
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Kansan Classified
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358
305 For Sale
310 Computers
315 Home Furnishings
320 Sporting Goods
325 Stereo Equipment
330 Tickets
340 Auto Sales
345 Motorcycles for Sale
360 Miscellaneous
370 Wanted to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
410 Condos for Rent
300s
Merchandise
4153027896
Things Are Heating Up!
SPECIALIZED.
Specialized Summer Sale
July 14 to 31
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
804 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044 785.843.5000
The summer bargains are heating up, and now's the best time to save on great Specialized bikes and accessories at The Sunflower Bike Shop! Hurry in for the best selection of the best bikes around!
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
SPECIALIZED.
415 Homes for Rent
420 Real Estate for Sale
430 Roommate Wanted
Classified Policy
The Kansas law requires all access any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex or age. Sex, color, creed, gender, sexual orientation, nationality or disability are protected in most of the advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation.
All real estate advertising in this publication must be advertised by a Household Act of 1908 which makes it eligible to advertise any interest, eligibility, rate, color, region, sex, hardship, familial status, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status, or make any such appearance, limitation Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertisements in this publication
1
100s Announcements
120 - Announcements
120 - Announcements
HEADQUARTERS
First Call For Help
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
Telephone/In person
24 Hours
841-2345
120 - Announcements
1
Beds, Desks, Bookcases, Chester Drawers,
Every But Ice, 1936 Mass.
Male and female toilet
200s Employment
205 - Help Wanted
BASS PLAYER WANTED for TOP 40 private musicians in styles. $100 per night. Michael Jenkins, 740-3649.
Disable woman 4 needs help for personal care, some lifting required. Hours vary. $5.50/hr.
Drivers wanted, must be 21, clean driver record Flexible hours. For interview call Lawrence drive
Golf Course maintenance and equipment operator
golf course available immediately at Lawrence
Appleseed. Phone 718-609-2541.
Part time weekend/weekday staff position
in the museum in Shawnee NM.
Call 913-841-4176 for details.
Wednesday, July 22, 1998
The University Daily Kansan
Section B · Page 5
205 - Help Wanted
Child Care in our home. Reliable person. 3 kids, 3 days a week. Need own car (91) 845-3663
Buffalo Bobs & 'M' Stail Sd. Stell need food service employees collect $125-$200 for signing now, paid profit sharing and start at $6 and go to $7/.harr. Apply @ 719 /1. Mass.
Child Care Center looking for teachers aria. Hrs.
7 a.m. 2 p.m. and 1-4 p.m. Experience in child care helpful. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan EOE
Experienced lead teacher for 2 yr old classroom.
Degree preferred. Apply with resume and references at Children's Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan, EOE
Part-time nanny needed for 20 mo. old twins, in our home. Experience w/ Toddlers required, begin August 18th, 8-5 M, W, F. Willing to consider 2 part-time persons, contact Diane at 846-0638.
Permanent Part-Term position available at family owned business in DeSteo, 3-20 days per week, & Saturdays, one-half day, Sales & some clerical. To apply, call 913-583-3748
The Granda is looking for interested lighting inters for dance nights and concerts for the fall. Training to begin immediately. Please contact Jennie or Scott at 842-1390.
Table servers needed now. Apply for positions at Mass St. Deli or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Both restaurants are high volume operations that generate generous tips. Apply at 719/12 Mass.
Servers needed? Day or night, and part time positions available. Apply in person at KU's favorite brew pub, Mill Creek Brewery in Westport, 4050 Pennsylvania, KCMO.
Therapist needed for eleven year old boy with Autism. Must like children and be willing to learn applied behavior analysis procedures. Training provided. Please call Selma (816) 361-3914.
Community Works Inc. is currently hiring personal assistors for day, evening, weekend, and overnight to work with people with head injury. Hours are 7:50/hr. Larew leavepointing办公室 (913) 634-8876 ext. 302.
Experience the Orient and earn $$. Montessori School, Trainway, seeking preschool teachers for all semester. fair included. Send resume. wnsewr@example.com Fax 765 6046. Fax 785-842-4727 Chirure@midusa.net
Help Wanted
Christian family seeking Mary Moppins for 3 great girls age 5, 8, and 11 y.o. Starts Aug 3, 19-Mon. Thurs. 7:30 a.m. + 5:09 p.m. (FRIDAYS OFF!) Great job for student in between semesters. Must be non-smoker, have transportation, and enjoy swimming. Contact Debbie at 321-0033.
DISABLED STUDENTS
CAMPUS MINISTRY POSITIONS
If you are experiencing problems receiving needed, effective accommodations at KU (e.g. phone 422-3822). Sharing your experiences may help give you a go to the system. Call between 8-noon or 6-10am.
Coordinator of Student Programming and Stud-
ents. Lead activities for the Ministry at the University of Kansas. Part Time positions available for persons interested in teaching, students. Contact Rev. Jay Henderson at 841-8661.
Supportive Educational Services at KI is accepting applications for an English Assistant (graduate level). August 17, 1989-May 1999 (renewable) $8.35 hr., 20 wk./hr. Must have a degree in English, or graduate student experience in tutoring or teaching at SES or in SES 7 Strong Hall. Closing date: July 31, 1999.
Textbook Clerk, KU Bookstore, $5.15/hr. M/ 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. through September 1, 1988 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. through September 1, 1988 understand English fluently, have previous retail, customer service experience, prefer Bookstore experience. Apply Kansas and Burge Office, Administration Office, Level 5, 13 th and Oread. AAA/EOE
Photo store is looking for a digital production assistant. Must have professional experience with Photoshop. Knowledge of IBM and MAC appreciated. Duties will include scanning, manipulation, and printing photos to and from computer systems. Will be the right person. Drop off or fax a RESUME; in the Image Works Inc. 23rd & Louisiana, (in The Mails shopping center) or Fax 865-5001.
Part-time Mother's Helper/Cook for busy family this coming school year. Meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking and light housekeeping. Job other sitters help take care of children. Please be based on experience. Must have own car. Work to start in August, but can start immediately. List of work experiences and references J. Burn, K. 480. 15h St. Suite 1012, Lawrence KS, 64094
Part-time administrative position available in our Government Relations Department. Administration duties with opportunity to contribute to professional lobbying team. Seeking person with demonstrated interest in politics (internship or equivalent) and one to two years secretarial or administrative experience required. Must be proficient in Microsoft Windows application, have excellent oral and written communication skills, strong profilreading ability and reading comprehension. Please send cover letter, resume, salary history and requirement by July 29, 1988 to:
Drive Lawrence, KS 66049-3858
Superintendents Association of America
Att: Human Resources-GRC
1421 Research Park
Drive Lawrence, KS 65037
Job Coach/Teaching Counselor Wanted!
Community Living Opportunities (CLO) is now recruiting a part-time Job Coach/Teaching Counselor. A Job Coach/Teaching Counselor is needed to work with an individual with a developmental disability in a fast food setting. hours are 9:00 am to noon, Monday through Thursday and 9:00 am to 1:00, Friday.
- Providing continual on-site supervision and on-task engagement of the person served;
* Arranging for proper support services/accommodation for the persons served.
- Experience with patients who have disabilities or other special needs;
Applications are being accepted on Tuesday 12pm - 3 pm and Thursdays 9am - 1pm at CLO, 2113 Delaware, Lawrence or call 865-5520 for more information. EOE.
Student Housing Dining Services
Starting Pay $5.50/hour Flexible Schedules Make New Friends Gain Valuable Experience Convenient Locations Scholarship Opportunities
Call or stop by any Dining Center
Ekdahl Dining - 864-2260
Oliver Dining - 864-4087
GSP Dining - 864-3120
Hashinger Office - 864-1014
EEO/AA Employer
205 - Help Wanted
Pipeline Productions, the area's finest concern promotion company is looking for intern for the fall. If you like live music, enjoy working hard, or learn more about how to get into the industry, call Kely at 749-8583.
Student clerk typist wanted for Fall Semester. Position can continue through Spring and following semesters. Not a Work Study position. Immediate start desired, but date is negotiable 10-28 hrs per week. $54./hr. Main duties: copying, filing, some data entry on MAC and other general office computers. $49./hr. Continuing Education is moving to 151 S.I. St., 161 K. Island & Kasol (Aspley). Apply by 3 pm July 31 to Rita Fine (785) 864-4797, Business Office, Continuing Education Building, EOE
TACO BELL
Restaurant Manager
$25,000.00
-30,000.00
Looking for career-minded individuals with a strong desire to succeed. Experience required. To manage in the Lawrence area. Excellent benefits: insurance, profit sharing, 401K, sick pay.
Send resume to 3301 N Belt Hwy.
St. Joseph, MO 64506
EOE
225 - Professional Services
---
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 NAMES 843-4023
235 - Typing Services
9
300s Merchandise
X
305 - For Sale
S
For sale: 1988 Honda Elite Moped 306c. Good condi-
tion, great campus transport. Call Matt 941-697-6021
or Matt 941-697-6021. Call Matt 941-697-6021.
LARGER/FIRMER BREATS !!!
Safe and Affordable alternative packages
BREAST PATENTS & BRASTEET
BRASTEET
---
1993 Mercury Topaz, 4d, dr. AC/AM/FM cassette,
music controller; $5000. Phone: (918) 826-1000, excellent
condition; $5000. Phone: (918) 826-1000.
360 - Miscellaneous
$ $ $ $ $
GAME DUY
GAME GUY
BUY
SELL
TRADE
360-Miscellaneous
- Sony PlayStation
- Nintendo
370 - Want to Buv
$ $ $ $ $
Your used computer (PC or Mac)
$1,000 Keward for your good used computer.
- Super Nintendo
MIRACLE VIDEO - Summer Sale. ALL ADULT
VIDEO TAPES $12.98 & up. Come in at 1910
Haskell Ave. 481-754-704.
7 East Seventh
331-0080
UNI Computers 841-4611
$$$$$
- PC CD ROM
400s Real Estate
www.game-guy.com
- Game Boy
$1,000 Reward
$1200 6-7 BR, Avail Aug 1, deposit, lease, no pets.
843-1601.
3 BR Apt., Near KU, Utilities paid $900 lease deposit Pnus Pets 843-1051 Avail now
405 - Apartments for Rent
Excellent location. 1104 Tenn. near/kau. 2 BR
In plex 4.5x c, no pets. $140. Aug 18-42-42
1 BR App. Near KU, Water Paid, Lease, Deposit.
No Pets 843-1601
Apt for Bent
Spacious two bedroom apartment. Two bedroom
room per month. 635. West 25th Street. Call 843-
6447
4 BDRM/ 2 bathroom apt. at Campus Place avail.
Aug. 1986 until Aug. 1999. Excellent location, close to
campus. Call Becky at 785-841-1428.
Available August, 1128 Ohio, spacious 2 bedroom apt. between campus and downtown. Close to GSP & Corbin. No Pets. $50+ utilities. 841-1270
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Heatherwood Dr Open 1pm - epm Mon - Fri,
843-7549
Quiet, comfortable, spacious, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks to KU. Some utilities paid. Off street parking. No pets. B41-5500
Real nice 1& 2 i8dm apices, close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows in the front and back. 10x13.197cm (13' x 13'). FC49-2b1
FC49-2b1
BEST PRICE
Nice, clean. quiet 2 b r apt., appliances, c/a bus
ware and more. Low utills. $60.00. No soap/
pet/kit.
Kansas Zen Center seeks applicants with serious interest in meditation to share residential practice center. Beginning Aug. 1st. Call 842-6850 for details. Leave message.
2 bdmj, l bath, 1 year old, patio, microwave, dish washer, w/d, disposal, cable, pool & weight room on premise. 6858 Call Carolyn or Art. 2001 W 8th High Point 842-8936
For rent: 2 bedroom furnished apartment, 1 bathroom, $520 monthly plus utilities. Connect to bus route.
Available in August. For info call 838-4432 or Rebecca at 841-5255.
OREAD NEIGHBORHOOD
Several good 2 BR apts. in 1200 inch block. W/D
hookups. Available Aug. $450.
George Waters Mmnt.
Nice and large 1000 sq ft it amenity with back yard, lower level, walk to campus less than a mile, two bedrooms with kitchen and newly remodeled bath, toilet, laundry room, and parking lot. long call; 785 840-2523, available August 1st.
2 & 8 RbAs awa for summer & fall. Nice, quiet and clean W. Lawrence location. Private patio/balcony. On KU bus route. Easy I-70 access. Laundry facility & swimming pool, on site. CA, CH, DW. Starting at $79-$435. Drop in any time 6-Monr. Call Holiday Apartments. 843-6011
GREAT1BEDROOM
4 & 8 ABRs, avail for summer & fill. Nice quiet and clean W. Lawrence location. Walk in closet, 2 baths, on KU bus route, easy access to 1-7. Laundry facility & swimming pool on site. Ca, CH, DW. Starting at $630-$760. Drop in anytime 9-Mon-Fri. Call Holiday buildings. 483-0119 to view.
atps, at newer complex near 6th & Iowa. D/W,
microwave, C/A/W dHookups. "Stacked." Onite
laboratory available. Some carpets available.
No pets, please. $395. Available now.
George waters M
841-5533
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
1 & 2 Bedrooms
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Exercise Room
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
$ \uparrow $ On KU Bus Route
405 - Apartments for Rent
3 Hot Tubs
1 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
**Quit location, on bus rete, JBR water, pdr**
*$495 all奢 & W/D, built in bookshelves.*
Unfurnished Room
Near KU, 812 7509 paid, deposit lease
no pets. Call 834-1631.
Immediate Availability
1 & 2 BR apts;
3 BR townhouses,
$365 & up
BR 29b warehouse for Aug. move in - loft style, 2 full baths, 1 w/jacuzzi tub & skylight, FP, garage/opener $720 + utilities Call 841-7726
Extended hours
10-4 Mon.-Fri.
9-4 Sat.
Call 841-7728
2109 Heatherwood #A-2
Hurry...Don't miss this
GRAYSTONE
2512 W.6th St.749-1102
Part25
2Pools/2LaundryRooms
25 2P00921anuary
25 Volleyball Court
25 Volleyball Court
$\textcircled{25}$ OH RU Bus Route
$\textcircled{26}$ SomeW/DHodags
25 On KU Bus Route
25 SomeW/DHookups 26
Now leasing for the summer and fall semesters. Very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments available.
25 Low Deposits
25 Small Pets Welcome
Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established
Call or stop by today!
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
PALM ISLAND
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer and Fall
1 Bedroom $370
2 Bedroom $435
3 Bedroom $630
4 Bedroom $760
-Swimming Pool
-On bus route
-Laundry facility
-Nice quiet setting
-On site management
-Behind the Holidome
211 Mount Hope Court #1
Call 843-0011 or 550-0011
Office Hours
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
Cedarwood Apartments
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
* Swimming pool
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
• Swimming pool
• On site Laundry facilities
• Air Conditioning
• Close to shopping
& restaurants
• On KU Bus route
• REASONABLE PRICES!
Call Karin Now!
843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
LCA Apartments, Inc.
- Spacious houses/apts.
* 2, 3, 4 BRs.
- Furnished and unfurnished
* Located block from campus
* On KU bus route
- Pets welcome (at selected locations)
- AC, DW, disposal, W/D,
microwave
- On KU bus route
- Roommate needed for 3&4 bdrm apts.
Aspen West
- Parking lots, balconies
Now Leasing for Fall!
Call 749-3794
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Water Paid
- Cable Paid
- Laundry on Site
- No Pets
405 - Apartments for Rent
- Reasonable rates
2900 West 15th Lawrence, KS 66049
865-2500
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere.
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route
9th & Avalon • 842-3040
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
1
GREAT LOCATION!
NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL '98
Jamestown Apartments
KVM
- Alabama Place Apartments
- Red Oak Apartments
- Fountain Homes
- Laundry Room
Call 841-6080 or stop by
STUDIOS; 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS;
DUPLEXES & HOMES
CREATING AGENCIES
808 W.24th St.
- 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes
- Studios, 1, 2, 3, bedroom apt.
Pets O.K. in Some Locations
24 hr Maintenance
for August
- Eddingham Place Apartments
- Water paid in apt.
---
- Available now and a few
- Walking distance to campus
- Swimming Pool
RESERVE YOUR NEW HOME TODAY!
Monday-Friday 8-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
- Basic cable paid
Fireplace
Meadowbrook
Professionally Managed By 808 W.24th
- Swimming Pool
ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Exercise Weight Room
- Energy Efficient
- Laundry Room
- 405 - Apartments for Rent
- On Site Management
- Daily 2:00-5:00
M mastercraft management
WALK TO CAMPUS
Regents Court 19th & Mass * 749-0445
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-4226
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind.
HARVESTER CAFE
Campus Place
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
Sundance
KVM
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
Equal Housing Opportunity
Mon - Fri 9am 5pm
Sat 10am 4pm
Sun 1pm 4pm
841-6080
841-5444
S
Management
ABERDEEN
TOWNHOMES
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1-bedroom $345
2-bedroom $420
NEWER!
SUMMERTREE WEST
TOWNHOMES
2 & 3 bedroom
Starting at $695
NEW!
SUMMERTREE WEST TOWNHOMES 2-bedroom/2-level Starting at $550 NEWER!
OPEN HOUSE
M-F 1-5
Sat 10-4
Sun. 1-4
2300 Wakarusa Dr.
SE Corner of Clinton Pkwy.
and Wakarusa Dr.
749-1288
410 - Condos For Rent
اللعنوان
Unfurnished 3 BDMR, 2 Bath, complete kitchen,
washer and dryer, $90/mo. (913) 681-8987
HISTORIC STONE TOWNHOUSE
Avail Aug 1st, 2BRS,
2 Bath, DW, W/D, CA.
Private Courtyard,
wood vaulted ceiling,
2 car garage, jacuzzi.
806 Pennsylvania,
$650/month.
Call 842-2308
415 - Homes For Rent
Real nice spaciosies 5 bdrm house close to KU
1024 petitions, lots of windows. Absolutely NO
petitions. 769-2419
Houses for Rent
3, 2. B. HR舍 No Pets. Deposit. Near KU Avail. Aug. 183-1601
430 - Roommate Wanted
---
NRS responsible female roommate need to share
Pinnacle Woods. $775.00 + 1/2 utilities. 749-280
Non-smoking roommate requires 2-bd. apt very close to campus; $125/month + 1/2 tuition. Gratuit.
Need more details? Call 800-697-2474.
NS roommate wanted: Lux. apt. avail. Aug. 5 th.
NS roommate wanted: Lux. apt. avail. Aug. 5 th.
$323/mo At mail at 913-677-0338
Roommate need to need 3 bdmr 2 duplex in
Lawrence A/C W/D wargame $250 + 3/u3lilu
in Lawrence A/C W/D wargame $250 + 3/u3lilu
N/S female roommate needed to share 2 bdrm. 2 bdrm apt. 8217.50 rent + 1/ utilizes. Lease starts Aug. 1. Call Bindi @ (913)829-9098 ASAP.
Please leave a message.
Roommate need to拥抱 2 bdm apt. Close to campus. On bus route. Laundry facilities in building. Avail.Aug.住 ist.1$95/mo.& 1/2 cups. Call $31-2837 for more info. or to view apt.
Roommate Needed
Four bedroom house on 1227 Ohio. Looking for studi-
dors, slightly nerdy and friendly person. Gradua-
ce or under graduate wanted. You should probab-
ably be fond of animals, especially cats. Looking
for someone with an interest in humanities. Call
832-8738
Section B·Page 6
The University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 22, 1998
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Antonio Banderas plays Zorro, the gallant bandit-turned-hero who saves his people from the hands of the evil Don Rafael Monero in TriStar Pictures' The Mask of Zorro. Contributed Photo
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Zorro leaves few original marks
By Jeremy M. Doherty
Kansan movie critic
The good guys (Antonio Banderas and Anthony Hopkins) are not struggling with inner demons. The bad guy (Stuart Wilson) desires money and power. Each action scene contains the right balance of derring-do and tongue-cheek humor. And, of course, there's a gorgeous woman (Catherine Zeta-Jones) to taunt the hero's heart.
After a summer of boring action flicks centered on computer-generated monsters and explosions, The Mask of Zorro could strike today's fickle audiences as more than a little quaint.
Director Martin Campbell freely
borrowselementsfrom50-year-old ErrolFlynnmovies.Impressively, heisable tokeep thematerial from deteriorating intocamp.Faithfully recreating the sun-parched California ofthe1840s,Campbell injects freshenthusiasm intofamiliar swordfights andhorse chases.
This version is a changing-of-the guard tale, with the aging Zorro (Hopkins) training a brash young lad (Banderas) in the ways of swashbuckling and peasant-saving. Their enemy is a land-grubbing governor (Wilson), who kidnapped Zorro's daughter (Jones) years before and raised her as his own child.
Campbell stages some interesting scenes, such as when Banderas infiltrates a high-society ball and
seduces Jones during a risqué tango. Hopkins' aging bandit also shares a touching scene with his daughter, revealing his feelings for her without identifying himself.
A needlessly long subplot involves enslaved peasants who are excavating gold for the governor's expansion plans. Although it sets up the final battle sequence, it stretches the movie's running time past the two-hour limit.
Thankfully, the casting of The Mask of Zorro could have been much worse. Bandera seems born to wear Zorro's mask, and Hopkins provides plenty of the movie's credibility as Zorro's Yoda-like mentor. Even Jones manages to make her underwritten role seem more lively than the script required.
THE MASK OF ZORRO
Of course, action movies are only as good as their villains, and any decent swashbuckler requires the steely presence of a Basil Rathbone or an Alan Rickman. Here, we get Stuart Wilson.
Who? Exactly. Is this the definitive Zorro adventure? Hardy. That honor goes to 1940's The Mask of Zor罗, which starred Tyrone Power as the bandit and featured the great Basil Rathbone as the bad guy. But this new version will do for now.
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