VOL. 101, NO.7 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANASAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY KOPEKA, NS 66412 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4.1990 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 Students here from Soviet Union NEWS: 864-4810 Exchange students arrive from Leningrad University as the first two participants By Christine Groody Kansan staff writer Yelena Yankovskaya returned to her room in McColm Hall on Friday morning and found two notes on her door. One was written in Russian, the other in English. Both notes were message "Welcome to the 10th floor of McColm Hall." This friendly gesture by the women on her floor made home seem a little less far away, said 21-year-old Lara Baldwin. Yankovskya and Kuykin are Soviet students. Yankovskya and Vladimir Kuykin are the first Soviet undergraduate students to participate in a student exchange program between Leningrad State University and St. Petersburg State University, and Debeh Debek director of the KU study abroad program. 'I have never left my house for such a long time. I am both sad and happy to be here - sad because I leave my family, happy because I get to meet people and learn more about the United States.' - Yelena Yankovskya Soviet exchange student Yankovskya, who will study English literature, and Kuykin, who will study society,叙事 occurred Thursday. "They called me in the late afternoon and asked if I wanted to go and I had to tell my answer in the same evening." Yankovskya said she knew nothing about KU because she did not have anyone to ask for information. The only information she had about Kansas was what she had read in a history book Loss of Margin worries officials "I went to the consulate to get my papers, and I did not By Yvonne Guzman Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer The Legislature's failure to match theMargin of Excellence resulted in lower faculty salaries compared to KU's five peer institutions, said Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor. "With the first couple of years we were gaining again." Shankel said. "With this year's failure to fund the Margin we dropped back again." Faculty Salary Comparisons Average Salary (in dollars) Salaries Relative to Peers (in percent) KANSAN the division of biological sciences, said that before the Margin passed, the biology department lost several students to other schools and private industry. "Salary was a big factor in all those decisions," he said. Sometimes departments do not have the problem of attracting and maintaining talented faculty because they cannot afford to fill them. 175 to 300 students. Don Stull, associate chairperson of the department of anthropology, said that last year the department hired a new faculty member in 13 years. Kicker Although faculty salaries are a concern, they are not the only place where lack of Margin financing will have an impact. Continued from p. 10 starters the one to get the job done best," Adamle said. "The new ones' time has been limited," he said. As far as other new players to look out for, Adam said that the coaching staff had spent most of its time working with the first string players for Saturday's game. Although there was quite a bit of depth, most of the attention had gone to the Below Eichhorn on the扑unting depth chart are junior Brad Ramsey, senior Brad Ball Smith. Ramsey joined the Kansas roster last year as a walk on and was redshirted. He averaged 42.3 yards on six pints in the season, making up a scrimmage. His longest was 55 yards. Ball spent last year as the back up punter behind Lohen. He replaced Lohen, who was out because of illness, against Kent State and averaged 32.5 yards on two attempts. He averaged 39.2 yards in the challenge with his longest putt being 46 yards. Lambert, who was named to all-conference, all-district and all-Fort Myers New Press teams in high school, averaged 40.8 yards last at FT. Myers High School Ft. Mvers. Fla. Behind Eichloch on the place kicking depth chart is sophomore Alex Chaffetz. He is followed by junior Kevin Kimerer and freshman walk-on Jim Ratoh. Chaffetz worked as a reserve behind Fleeman last year on all placements. Bill Crowe, dean of libraries, said Kimerer, a walk on last fall, was red-shirted and contributed an extra point and a 33-yard field goal for the winning Blue team in the scrimmage. Season opens with new faces, speculation The Associated Press New decade, new look for college football. Like the advertising athletes on TV, the season opener went to Disneyland — actually Anheaheim, Calif., for the Disneyland Pigskin Classic featuring Colorado and Tennessee. The game ended in a 13-11 tie. Today, Southern California meets Syracuse in the Kickoff Classic at East Rutherford, N.J. Bo is gone and George is back, Arkansas is switching leagues and Notre Dame is switching quarterbacks. Juniors are jumping off Classic on no longer kicks off the season. For the first time in 22 years Bo Schembacher won't be on the sidelines for Michigan his opener. Schembacher switched sports and became president of the Detroit Tigers, handing the Wolverines over to longtime assistant Gary Moeller. "What's tough is knowing what you've got to live up to." Meolier said. While Bo has left the sidelines, another famous motivator is returning to college. George Allen, who never coached a losing team in 12 FLON seasons, will be hard pressed to maintain his winning ways at Long Beach State, which nearly dropped "When about five people told me it was impossible, that's when I got interested." Allen said of his new job. "Everybody I talked to said it can't be done." At 72, Allen is the oldest head coach in the country. But he still has the youthful enthusiasm he had in 1956 when he coached the team that won the national once had a lineman named Richard Nixon. Long Beach is one of 20 Division I-A schools with new head coaches. Alabama hired Stallings to replace Bill Curry, who got tired of his Tide tormentors and left for Kentucky. In other major moves, Ken Hatfield went from Arkansas to Clemens, then to Dallas. Then John Jenkins from assistant to head man at Houston, where his run-and-shot offense helped Andre Ware win the Heisman Trophy. Had they stayed another year, Ward West Virginia quarterback Major Harris Ware and 37 other juniors skipped their final year of college to enter the NFL draft after the league relaxed its rules on admiting underclassmen. and Florida running back Emmit Smith would have been leading contenders for the 1903 Heisman. Now, the early favorites are all-purpose speedster Raghb "Rocket" Ismail of Notre Dame and three quarterbacks — Colorado's Darian Hagan, Brigham Young's Ty Detmer and Miami's Craig Erickson. Ismail has plenty of talented teammates at Notre Dame. But if the Irish are to challenge for the national title, they'll have to find a leader to replace quarterback Tony Rice, who led the Irish to a 24-1 record in his last two seasons. Sophomore Rick Mirer, a better passer than Rice, will start at quarterback. But if he gets hurt, the Irish will have to go with one of their freshmen backups. Quarterback is no problem at Miami, which earned the title "Team of the 80%" by closing out the decade with its third national championship in six years. In his first year as a starter Erickson guided the team to victory in 2013, including a 27-10 victory over Notre Dame. The Oct. 20 rematch at South Bend marks the end of the bitter Miami-Notre Dame rivalry, at least for the foreseeable future. They decided to stop the series because hostility between the teams was getting out of hand. Another long-standing relationship comes to a close when Arkansas plays its final season in the Southwest Conference. The Razorbacks are leaving the SWC after three years, and richer Southeastern Conference, a move that has angered some other SWC schools. "We'll have a lot of teams after us." Arkansas quarterback Quinn Grovey said. "We might as well have targets painted on our helmets and jerseys." Miami, Florida State, Nebraska, Colorado, Texas and TEXAS & M are the most sought-after schools in the conference dury, a competition fueled by the desire for more television money and exposure. Their decisions, which should be known by the end of the season, will help shape the future of college football. As for the present, there will be a record eight bowl games on New Year's Day now. (And you know what they say.) The switch, along with Penn State's upcoming entry into the Big Ten, has triggered widespread speculation about a handheld superconference. QualityInn "Quality with a touch of class." Come experience the pleasure of staying at Quality Inn University. You will receive the friendly service and hospitality that you have come to expect from a quality hotel. Your luxurious accommodations include all new rooms in our completely remodeled establishment, as well as many other amenities made available - Complimentary Full Cooked-to-Order Breakfast - Atrium Restaurant - Duffy's Lounge - Commercial Rates - Free Cable TV with Premium Channels - Meeting Rooms Available - Facsimile Services Available Come stay with us at Quality Inn University and enjoy the qualities of a fine hotel. Come experience Quality Inn University . . . quality with a touch of class. Good Luck Hawks! 2222 West 6th St. ass of the Margin would make less competitive in attracting archers. Schlager said. [913] 842-7030 combination of the loss of Margin art and rising publishing prices ably would result in less spend in books and periodicals. gither department budgets and a or minimum wage would reduce number of student jobs, said Jill McGraw of the student labor center. Jennifer Warner/KANSAN d Programs alf crisis ports oil from Arabian countries, donga, Nigeria and other nations, and the United Kingdom soon will to export because of declining y for 170 days, Preston said, the second largest oil-producing nation, he said. But it about $2 per cent of the oil it inferred in 1950. 12 if countries which have the excess preston said. diversity o the video was positive, she said. a senior, who worked as an aw the video during the summer e crowd," he said. "During the mom cry. It really got to her. It in others." rn, Neb., freshman, said that the ant but that it could have been normal way. Friday, August 31, 1990 / Kansas Football 1990 we used more creative methods to said. "I think it would have been See VIDEO, p. 6