SINCE 1889 Taxi drivers 17 cabs from three companies scour the city for passengers See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, OCT. 24, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 44 (USPS 650-640) ... Warm Details page 3. Breach of contract suit filed by softball pitcher By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff A breach of contract suit was filed Friday in Douglas County District Court by a former KU women's softball pitcher against the University of Kansas and Bob Stanclift, women's softball coach. The suit alleges that the Ua breached its contract with Crenshaw when it terminated athletic scholarship on Feb. because of an injury she while playing for the KU's softball team. the accrued interest for d under contract for Coelett Crenshaw, Toneke junior. The suit asks for more than $10,000 in actual damages, more than $10,000 in future claims. Italian United Press International GENOA, Italy — Police to Lauro hijackers a secret reports that he confessed that med Abul Abbas mastermil sources said. Officers moved the man, American Leon Klinghoffer, tral Italy to the northern porch then took him to a maximum northern region of Liguria. The sources did not identify state-rum television RA1 que saying he was the gunman w fer, a disabled American vestigators were examining RA1 report said. Several leading newspaper ROTC tc By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff All members of the KUF ricers Training Corps will for exposure to the AIDS vi- n next year as a result of a denounced Friday by the U.S. ment of Defense. The test, now limited military recruits, will be in stages and will check all members of the U.S. m spokesman for the Depa Defiance said yesterday. The spokesman, Glenn FI the actual policy regard testing would be released in few days. "The policy is being cems Secretary Weinberger." F "Right now there are" Edwin P. Carpenter, one of two Topeka attorneys representing Seizir-Cresnhaw, said yesterday that the University and Stancill persuaded Seizir-Cresnhaw to finish high school and complete a four-year scholarship but reneged on that promise after she suffered injuries to her arm and elbow. The suit also alleges that the University neghently contributed to Carpenter said the suit was filed because repeated attempts by Seitz-Crenshaw and her attorneys to get the University to reinstate her scholarship had failed. Neither Seitz-Crenshaw nor Donald Barry, the other attorney representing her, could be reached for comment yesterday. Carpenter said the terms of Seitz- Grenshaw's scholarship prohibited SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION was like prep school in that you were tested for prep memory, you writet it all back on your exam and forget it next day. You weren't asked to think just to lectures, take notes and take an exam I was a Classics - Classies is still an inspiration to me - but my father wanted me to major in Economics. He wrote me a letter and said "I am appalled, even horrified, that you have adopted Classies as a major!" I printed his notebook in the school newspaper. When he吮ed what my father thought it was. He thought it was about business administration and how to get job, but at Brown, it was just经济 theory, anti-business, socialism, not free enterprise. Professor pleased communist I barely passed. We weren't treated intellectually and I wasn't motivated. I didn't college to get a job. I got suspended twice for bringing a girl to room - it was a stupid rule. I violated it. I dropped out, and I thought more in prep school. I got learned about sixocrate degrees. so don't miss my undergraduate degrees. But I always read a great deal. Most kids today read that they just watch TV. And you can't equate Dynasty with Daniels.info. can win? I'd been leading up to UCLA. There were only 7,000 students who I went, and the union was very cheap - my father said cost something like $48.33 it. It had recently expanded from a teachers' college to a university and a AGNES DeMILLE TED TURMER CHONEOGRAPHER UCLA 1923-1927 **courses** in English just for the pleasure of it. I took so many English courses. I realized it could easily have a BA in English saleng with my BS in Physics. I loved Samford and its mvs.mars and courses in English just for the pleasure of it. I took so many English courses. I realized it could easily have a BA in English saleng with my BS in Physics. I loved Samford and its mvs.mars and had gone to military prep schools and I wanted to go to Annapolis because I liked the military grapa care an area in which to excel, like the Boy Scouts. You loved hard and had the right attitude and was a chance for promotion. my father insisted I to go at tiy League school he was impressed with my "mystique." Brown was dispassionate my expectations were too high, but demonstrate in Physics there I was applying for some of those research jobs when I answered an ad in the paper from NASA as assistant animators. I was accepted by NASA so quickly never mastered applying to other job types. I didn't know what to expect from NASA, but its turned out to be, well, like graduate school. You, as around learning NASA, you sit around learning school, mostly, you sit around learning And done a lot of paperwork TED TURNER DRIVERS FOR CHANGE Brown University 1960-63 Broadcaster Ted Turner: "We always read a great deal. Most kids today don't read, they just watch TV. And you can't equate Dynasty with Dante's Inferno." Dennis Dalley, professor Lesbian Services of Kat University Forum yers Oread Ave. Dalley said to anybody or any University. I wanted a small liberal arts college on the East Coast so I could get out of Los Angeles. The Sawthorne had a good program. Only the problem was that I stopped playing to play at Swarthmore and I played to play again, this time professionally. I intended to take a semester off and practice my terms in Los Angeles, but, as I had more time to think, I decided, couldn't mind six hours of practice耍 college so I started thinking about college again. I liked Stanford because it had a strong Physics department and I planned to a research physicist for a university or a national lab. I never considered space as a career. Swarthore also had a team team which I played on my whole year team. A science course and I began taking 'sustant courses and began taking just ben out of Unh in my life, and the university was only an hour and a half been out of Unh in my life, and the university was only an hour and a half from where I lived. I met my wife in chemistry class the first day in school and pursued her all through college. By junior year we were married. Forty percent of the student body was Marion and Mormons got married Swarthmore College 968-69 Stanford 170-78 BA + 1973, M5, PhD. Physics 1978 U.S. D. Physics 1978 SALLY RIDE We had our first time in the spring of senior year. The biggest step is kids that when we're really married. Senior year I was working two afternoons a week as an instructor for my advisor, an emyloger. He was my aid and he got me into mid school. A mentor is important for getting into med school. I graduated from mid school. my in medical school. I applied for a job from Dr. Willem Kliff, who created the kidney dialysate machine. He said he was "Devilry," that is a good Dutch name You're密钥. The secret of a Dutch name in medicine is to associate yourself with a guy who has a good reputation. Having Dr. Kliff as a mentor really meant everything. DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES SURGEON AND RESEARCHER OF, THE ARTIFICIAL HEART University of Udhay 1962-66 University of Udhay Medical School 1970 DARE University 1979 I always wanted to be a doctor. My father had been one and mother was a nurse I had an aptitude for biology and was fascinated by the body and by machines. My father died when I was young and I had nine brothers and sisters, so I had to find scholarship to get into college. I was good at basketball and track and UCLA offered me an athletic scholarship, but only paid for half of my tuition, so I went to the University of Utah where I offered a full scholarship, I had never DR. WILLIAM DeVRISS Duke University 1979 people mind at you. And mind at me? tell them to watch it because I'm mad at them. government voted against it. "I government would vote against it. I was not afraid of standing up for what I believed in fact. I liked being in a visible role. The wife went back to the segregation and as I walked back to the gymnasium, a group of friends up to tell me. Watch out. There are a lot of people out." I was always active in public issues, I was president of my dorm room and senior year and a shirt of the board of female dorms season 12. The year that voting student government had to vote, the black students to Duke at a meeting I was shackled when the men's meet cated some about the during the situe juror nained that m to ques- Service had taker of the be used as ay, Pedro and the exe- by the s pipe join- unpling that we weight of to law school, but a professor warned me that school lawyers were never in the courtroom. I had been a man I would have gown to law school. I chose Political Science as my major in order to apply about government and public policy. An awful leo of government process has been useful in NOW! I wish that other schools would teach others about political systems than our own. My parents always planned on college. They were important to them they wereimmigrated and would say, "I scrubbedthe immigrant but you go to school." Theypaid for Duke I thought of becominga skipping teacher year and going 1 For Robert Penn Warren's course at Yale, I wrote a novella in which Chubby Checker appeared as a redeep Warren asked me, "Have you considered a career in television?" expected to Lunch was a two-hour affair I'd read the college newspaper and group twice, each time with a different person. I time with an English major for Robert Penn Warren's class. I wrote something called "a guy search," a whimsical story about a girl searching for his girlfriend. In one scene, Chubby Checker appeared as a redcap Wilbur ask me. "Have you considered a career in television?" For my first paper in American Culture class, I wrote a sitcom about a family with a son just back from Vietnam. It was like David Rabe meets Craze and Harrier, and got an in a local TV station, they told me. "You're doing TV shows for all the people you going to college with." I've been trying to suppress some of my education since. Aara Oison, and Patrick um yester- ELEANOR SMAL PRESIDENT, NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN Duke University 1957-61 University of Florida 1963 ELEANOR SMEAL on my resume tends to make me look intellectual, but I wasn't sure when I was arrived here, and I didn't become one I was always a child of TV and in the back of mind I always knew I had popular tweets. When I was a kid at what I wanted to do, other students did not want it. I knew what I did. Other students had a pennant mean pain and believed that academia meant pain and hard work. They took the hardest courses, but it didn't seem to make sense to me to get involved with miscellaneous courses. I knew the right course to take by following around the football players on the day to sign up for classes. Most of my friends were or aspiring comedy writers. I wrote humor for the Yale Record for four years and met Gary Trundau there. I was free-spirited, apolitical, played a lot of basketball and was captain of the fencing team. don't change honey's selling scores to the new kind of honey advice to sparring they're defensive about being a partner. Don't abuse nice time trying to answer or speak with deep understanding the mystery that goes into writing. Most people are not. printing. When I was in graduate school student Learning English at Connecticut, I was an unhappy B+ student I did no support with teachers, but somebody there, J. D O'Hara, will write a story put in in his mailbox, and he would edit and return it to my mailbox. The first story, old was one that be marked off to a old woman! deflated failure in Place to sit. dropped out by the time I was working on my Ph.D because I was he library manager, have done and hence he library manager has been trained to manage time, have done with a mary staff. developed business skills and helped to organize business. BRANDON VARTIKOFF NETWORK EXECUTIVE Yale College 1966-70 Public Radio Considered on National Public Radio and a friend who a graphic designer. My ambition in college was to somehow escape the 9-5-o-f life I wanted to major in journalism, and I switched to English I didn't get & in creative writing, but one teacher impressed me with the seriousness of impressing through his curricular analysis of *Jussie* I was on the staff of the bookwriter, a column of observations called "TJ" Eckelberg after the experiment. es est known in the film ensemble, woods to persece from b included on of "the measured men, Act 2, "Dance the beach" I the Conber Music requested for a con- p Glass to could be difficile," Davis that there n about all for an in-education, university of music for and the director for M, which it was an attitudes in no different 1 kinds of did not ensemble in- r; Jon Gib- C, p. 5, col. 4