THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.101.NO.54 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OPEKA; KS 66412 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 (0) By Jennifer Schultz Kansan staff writer THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1990 Condoms will be available in KU residence hall hoding machines next semester, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said last night at a Student Senate meeting. Condom machines will be on campus NEWS: 864-4810 The condoms will be sold in existing machines and should be in place by the beginning of the semester. The cost of the condoms has not been determined, Amber said. He said mechanical adjustments to the machines and orders for the condoms would also be before the end of this semester. The condoms will be removed from the vending machines during the summer because mostly minors will live in the residence of the University of Kansas has several camps during the summer. The Office of Student Affairs has been considering including the condoms in residence hall materials and sanctions for years, Amber肋 "No one is doing this lightly," he said. "We are very much want to be sensitive to that. We also want to encourage students to act responsibly." Ambler said the decision to make condoms available in residence halls was made informally by instructors in the last several weeks. Mike Schreiner, student body president, said he thought that Ambler chose to make the announcement at the Senate meeting because Senate played a vocal role in the issue. "Student Senate has been pressured the administration to do it for quite a while." Schreiner said. "I think the authority to do anything about it" Last year Senate passed a resolution stating it wanted condions to be distributed on campus and asked KU to study a condion vending machine program used at the University of Minnesota Schreiner said Ambler told him of the decision in a letter sent to him Nov 1. According to Schreiner, Ambler said in the letter that the University would discontinue distributing the condoms if the vending machines were voided or if the condoms Senate opposes engineering fee Kansan staff writer Bv Jennifer Schultz Student Senate passed a resolution last night stating that Student Senate adamantly opposes a proposal that would charge engineering students at $15-a credit-hour fee. The resolution also requests that the School of Engineering consult and include engineering students and Senate in making decisions affecting students. Mike Schreiner, student body president, said the resolution would be sent to the Board of Regents The fee was proposed by the deans of engineering at the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Wichita State University. The proposal, designed to help schools cover the cost of equipment used in engineering courses, will be presented to the Regents in November David Suroff, engineering senator, said, "If engineering equipment costs are going up, then raise our tuition gradually. But one school will always cost more to operate than others. Students should be able to choose their careers by interest and not what they can pay." But Carl Locke, dean of engineering, said the fee was necessary to finance needed equipment. "One of things I think (senators) ought to be sure about is that they are representing the engineering class." Locke said 40 percent of the engineering schools in the nation charged engineers a special fee to maintain, operate and replace laboratory equipment Schreiner said this was not the first time a restricted fee had been imposed on students. By Amy Zamierowski Kansan staff writer Dean sees no alternative to fee Although student senators are opposed to an equipment fee, the dean of engineering sees no alternative to retain the quality of the School of Engineering. "Without a substantial increase in funding to the school, we are going to degrade the quality of education," said Carl Locke, dean of engineering. "At this point, engineering equipment must be installed on the state. We have been getting this funding from the private sources, which is an uncertain source." Locke said the fee was needed to repair and replace existing lab equipment, including computers. Locke said that although engineering senators passed a referendum against the fee, they did not propose other ways to guarantee the quality of equipment and education in the David Suroff, engineering senator, said the senators needed to defeat the fee before they began working to find a solution to benefit them. Suroff said a concern was that a fee in one school could set a precedent and create a new standard. Locke said, "The fees may spread, but they may be needed. While students may think they are paying a lot for their tuition, it is lower than many schools." orian Culliss, president of Engineering Student Council, said he opposed the fee because it would apply only to engineering students, and he refused to promote freshmen away from the engineering field legislators threatened to cut KU anoroniations Shaun Nicholson, co-president of an engineering fraternity, Tau Beta Pi, said he supported the fee because he saw the need to fund research on the use of other means to finance the improvements. Pat Warren, Student Senate Executive Committee chairperson, said it was possible that in 1984-85 the Legislature would have reduced KU's budget to the amount the University raised through the fee. "I am one of the few students who support the fee," he said. Williams' basketball camp and that the time he sent them had improved his shot. some changes," he said. ne ne spent there had improved his shot. Known as "DOWNTOWN," Brown, he used his unorthodox shot of putting the ball through the basket in dangerous three-point shooters in college. Schreiner also said the proposed engineering fee did not meet the Regents requirement to explore all other possibilities of financing before imposing restricted fees. Continued from p. 4b Guards Brown broke the KU record for three-brown field goals with 89 field goals. His first 11 buckets last season were three-pointers, and he scored a career-high 31 points against Kentucky, setting another school record as the most three-point shot made in a game. Joining Brown this season, after spending two years on the bench, will be junior He said one of those options would be for the Homeless to money for the School of Tunstall was ineligible for both the 1988-89 and 1989-90 seasons after the NCAA ruled that there were irregularities in his ACT test scores. At Vason High School, Tunstall became the leading scorer, averaging 10.5 points a game. Jordan said Tunstall was good enough to play either point or shooting guard. Another highly recruited guard, who will have to take Tumask's turn on the bench, is the captain. Walters averaged more than 10 points a game in each of his two seasons at Northwestern and decided to transfer to Kansas in the offseason. He led NCAA's 1990-91 season, according to NCAA rules. A transfer who just finished his year on the bench is junior Doug Eldiston, who became a Jayhawk after spending a year at Notre Dame. He will be a reserve on their junior varsity team. towards the players we expect. "When we get on the court it's all seriousness," Jordan said. "But we all like to do things together on the weekends. I know that closeness the whole team feels will reflect in the way we play." Jordan said that although the guards were a tight-knit unit, they felt a closeness to their teammates. Big Eight Media Preseason Player Honors Player-of-the-Year Newcomer-of-the-Year Brent Price, Oklahoma Doug Smith, Missouri Shaun Vandiver, Colorado Victor Alexander, Iowa St. Kansas Doug Smith, Missouri Byron Houston, Oklahoma St. All-Big Eight Team Mark Randall KANSAN Get the perfect fit right from the time you try these prewash jeans on, and the fit will only improve with more washings! 100% cotton denim with heavy stitching and rivets at stress points. 1st Quality . MADE IN USA! 501 PREWASHED Compare to $29.95 Compare to $36.95 550 WHITEWASHED There's no need to wait for your jeans to fade, can we provide them in the exact faded condition you want. 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We take pride in creating most of our clothing ourselves. From hand-dying to silkscreen printing, we can custom-create clothing for the look you desire. Nobody else can offer this kind of service! COME BY AND SEE! 730 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 841-1999 University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 7, 1990 iy Zamierowski contributed in. 15b sture would face difficult predictession House ' said disappointment andation from the 1990 session, in several issues went unresolved make legislators more to cooperate with the new stration. we were a number of legisl- had reservations about the on) issue "he said, "but there are no questions. There are some question in the minds of some people, y will be answered as we get ¹ said the Democratic party benefit from a Democratic when the state Legislature elected Kansas U.S. congress has to be approved. Redi- has to be approved by the Senate and governor. as will lose one congressional a result of the 1990 census. citizens were targeting Rep.atterry, D-2nd District, one of democratic congressman from , for elimination because Slater is more vulnerable to being than Rep. Dan Glickman, District, Slattery and Glicktain their seats Tuesday. ¹ process ( of reapportion- ment) made more fair by having a atic governor and enhance- ment a Democratic House." *u* icker said a Democratic House save a limited effect on the citing process because of geoal and demographical rea- did three logical new districts the western Kansas, the area Sedgwick County and the ound Johnson County. The strict likely would have to be out of the 2nd and 5th dis- going to be a fight," she said. election coverage pages 3,5 ess after loss kept at the mansion for work around a for a time. an grew up on a farm near in northwest Kansas. said Hayden declined to news conference until ext week. nk within a few days he'll to talk," the press secrea! a said that Hayden spent with his family.