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Poison Nov. 5.7 ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA! Native American Heritage Month Native American Student Association University of Kansas TONIGHT November --goal line, Schottenheimer said. --goal line, Schottenheimer said. Lance Burr, Indian Law Attorney "Tribal Sovereignty" Alderson Auditorium 7:30 p.m. SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Chiefs hope week off shakes losing streak The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — After a week of working on what ali them, the Kansas City Chiefs are ready to get back into the NFL wars in earnest, Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer said yesterday. "The players have worked their tails off in the last three practice sessions." "We've had a chance to evaluate and analyze the things that have gone on and where we need to improve," he said. "We've been able to focus on those things. The players have worked their tails off in the last three practice sessions. I think we're all going to benefit from them." The Chiefs, 4-4, probably couldn't have picked a better time for their bye week. A 27-1 loss Oct. 25 to Pittsburgh at home, arguably the worst performance in Schottenheimer's five years as coach, left them losers in three of their last four games. Schottenheimer vowed to spent the time working out whatever problems had surfaced. "We looked in depth at everything—offense, defense, kicking game. We spent three practices working very hard on some of those things we feel we need to improve on." he said One thing both the offense and defense concentrated on was the way they've been operating close to the Marty Schottenheimer Kansas City Chiefs coach "We spent a lot of time training on that area, on offense and defense. Our percentage of scoring touchdowns in that area is not good enough," he said. "A year ago, I think they were scoring touchdowns 60 or 65 percent of the time, which is a heck of a lot closer to what we are looking for." Schottenheimer decided the problem couldn't be traced to personnel. "When people get down in there, it's an attitude. You've got to find a way to stop them," he said. "A year ago we were able to find a way. We've spent quite a bit of time on that." Nevertheless, Schottenheimer concluded his team overall doesn't have an attitude problem. After beating the then-beaten Eagles 24-17 on Oct. 11, Schottenheimer said, "We were being hailed as geniuses on the coaching staff, and the team was being lauded." "We lost against Dallas, then played very poorly against the Steelers, who beat us in every phase," he said. "But there's nothing wrong with our attitude. We've got to make sure we don't lose sight of the things that have given us a chance to be successful." The Chiefs are home Sunday against San Diego, which lost its first four and then won its last four. Now the Chargers are challenging the Chiefs and Broncos in the AFC. Kansas City opened the season with a 24-10 victory at San Diego. "They've averaged 25 points a game the last four games and only given up 10," Schottenheimer said. "We're going to have our hands full." "But I would continue to suggest, there's no such thing as a critical game," he said. "It's important because of the fact we lost three of our last four games. That's why it's important." LA's Karros earns top rookie honor The Associated Press the husky Los Angeles first baseman was chosen first on 22 of the 24 ballots and received 116 points overall from the Baseball Writers Association of America. NEW YORK — Eric Karros, who nearly played his way out of the Los Angeles Dodgers organization, was selected the National League Rookie of the Year yesterday. Montreal outfielder Moises Alou was the runner-up with 30 points, followed by Pittsburgh pitcher Tim Wakefield with two first-place votes and 29 points. Karros hit .257 with 20 home runs and 88 RBs. His home run total was the highest by a Dodgers rookie since Greg Brock also hit 20 in 1983, and his RBIs surpassed Ron Cey's Los Angeles rookie record of 80 set in 1973. Karros also led all rookies this season with 30 doubles. Karros' spot on the Dodgers was no sure thing entering spring training. "I wasn't surprised, but I'm definitely happy." Karros said. "It's been something that's been talked about the last few months, and it's finally done. It reflects the season I had, but I'd exchange it for our club to have been in a pennant race." After getting one hit in 14 at-bats for the dodgers at the end of the 1991 season, Karros went to winter ball in Caracas, Venezuela, instead of completing the 16 credits left on his economics degree at UCLA. It almost backfired. Karros hit. 113 with six RBIs and no extra-base hits in Venezuela and was released three weeks later by manager Phil Regan. "His stock really dropped with the guys that saw him," Lasorda said. "But when we took him to spring training, we knew the things he had to work with him on, and we spent a lot of time with him. He spent a lot of hours, and he overcame his deficiencies. "Phil Regan said to me, 'Hey, he's not the same hitter.' Naturally he wasn't, or we would have released him." Word Perfect $125.00 Microsoft Word $99.00 Claris Resolve $80.00 Get everything you need to make your Macintosh a top quality desktop computer at the Burge. KU Bookstores Computer Store Burge Union Level Two 864-5697