2B Monday. October 3.1994 UNDERCOVER Tuxedo teddy shown is $26 COUPON FREE Diet Center Consultation The pinkbuilding 21 W.9th Buy 2 Weeks, get 3rd Week FREE!! (Supplements in) Old and new members (No one present on program) (No other discount may be used with this great special). (Offer good up to 10/994) In 30 Days, Lose 3 Dress Sizes! If you're looking for a quick after-summer slimdown, or want to get trim for fall socializing, this is for you. Diet CENTER Center® Call 841-DIET (3438) 935 Iowa Hillcrest Medical Bldg. Open Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. by appt. build a Beautiful SAVE $139 Annual Membership-first visit Special rates for graduating seniors! Absolutely NO joining fee! 749-2424 BODY BOUTIQUE 925 Iowa The Women's Fitness Facility *You can stop your membership over Christmas & Summer Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation 1. Publication Title UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 2. Publication No. 6 5 0 - 6 4 0 3. Filing Date 9/28/94 4. Issue Frequency Daily during school year and Wednesday during summer session excluding Summer holidays and final periods 5. No. of Issues Published Annually 159 6. Annual Subscription Price 90.00 Complete mailing address of known Office of Publication (Street, City, County, State, and ZIP+4) (Not Printer) 119 Stauffer-Flint, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS Douglas County 66045 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 8. Complete Mailing Address of Headquarter or General Business Office of Publisher (Hot Printer) SAME AS ABOVE 6. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publishers, Editor, and Managing Editor (Do Not Leave Blank) The University of Kansas, State of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045 Editor (Name and Complete Mailing Address) SPORTS CONTACTS Managing Editor (Name and Complete Mailing Address) Christoph Fuhrmans 1131 Ohio, #4 Telephone # 66064 1131 Ohio, #4 Lawrence, KS 66044 10. Owner (if owned by a corporation, its name and address must be stated and also immediately thereafter the names and addresses of alcoholic vendors or holders; 1 per person or more of the total amount of stock, if not owned by a corporation, the names and addresses of the individual owners must be given. If owned by a partnership or other unincorporated firm, its name and address as well as that of each individual must be given. If the publication is published by a nonprofit organization, its name and address must be stated.) (Do Not Leave Blank.) Full Name Complete Mailing Address University of Kansas State of Kansas 11. Know Bondholders, Mortgages, and Other Security Holders Owning or Holding 1 Percent or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Mortgages, or Other 11. Known Bondholders, Mortgagees, and Other Security Holders Owning or Holding 1 Percent or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Mortgagees, or Other Securities. If none, check here. Full Name Complete Mailing Address | | | | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | 12. For completion by nonprofit organizations authorized to mail at special rates, the purpose, function, and nonprofit status of this organization and the exempt status for Federal income tax purposes: (Check one) - Has Not Changed During Preceding 12 Months - Has Changed During Preceding 12 Months PS Form 3526, October 1994 13. Publication Name University Daily Kansan 15. Extent and Nature of Circulation Average No. Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12 Months Actual No. Copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Date a. Total No. Copies (Net Press Run) 14,250 15,000 b. Paid and/or Requested Circulation (1) Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, and Counter Sales (Not Marked) 13,500 14,250 (1) Paid or Requested Mail Subscriptions (Include Advertisers' Proof Copies/Exchange Copies) 320 320 c. Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation (Sum of 18d(1) and 19d(2)) 13,820 14,570 d. Free Distribution by Mail (Samples, Complementary, and Other Free) 180 180 e. Free Distribution Outside the Mat (Carriers or Other Means) ----- ----- f. Total Free Distribution (Sum of 18d and 19d) 180 180 g. Total Distribution (Sum of 15c and 15d) 14,000 14,750 h. Copies Not Distributed (1) Office Use, Letters, Spotted 250 250 (2) Return from News Agents ----- ----- i. Total (Sum of 15g, 18h(1), and 18h(2)) 14,250 15,000 Percent Paid and/or Requested Circulation (11c/11g x 100) 96.9 97.1 18. This Statement of Ownership will be printed in the October 3rd issue of this publication. ☐ Check box if not required to publish. 17. Signature and Title of Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner Date Tom Ebbon, General Manager Sept. 27, 1983 I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnishes false information on this form or provides incorrect information must be notified immediately. Tom Eblan General Manager September 27, 1954 I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnishes tables or including information on this form or who must material or information furnished on this form may be subject to criminal action (including areas and impoundment) civil warrant (including multiple damages and civil penalties). Hockey season put on hold Fans visit museums, local bars during wait TORONTO — Canada still has plenty of beer to drown its sorrows and a national health care system, to boot. It's a good thing, too, because the delay of the NHL season is hitting folks here pretty hard. By Jimmy Golen The Associated Press "It's a very strange sensation not to have hockey," said Tony Busbridge, who took his 13-year son to the Hockey Hall of Fame on what was supposed to be the NHL debut. It's as bad as if — try to imagine it — the United States were to lose major league baseball. Gary Bettman, NHL commissioner, on Friday postponed the start of the season until at least Oct. 15 to give players and owners more time to work out a labor agreement. lation of the baseball season. But for Canadians, it was devastating. In the United States, it was just an added irritation on top of the cancel- For many of them, Saturday night broadcasts of "Hockey Night in Canada" are where the memories started. "Every since I was a little kid, there's always been hockey on Saturday nights," said Mike Conway, who spent this one in a bar watching television. Fans in Vancouver remember eating dinner by the television to catch the early 5 p.m. starts. Back east, parents let their children stay up late to see the end of the game. Not this year, though. At least not yet. "It probably tugs at everybody's heart strings a little bit," said Ottawa Senators defenseman Brad Shaw after a players' union meeting ended with no progress. "Hockey is everything as far as I'm concerned and there's nothing that can replace it," said Shirley Walsh, another Hall of Fame visitor. "I live and breathe hockey in the winter." This year, fans like Walsh were going to get a bonus as broadcasts expanded to doubleheaders. "She'll have two TVs and a radio going," her husband, Ray, said At Wayne Gretzky's restaurant they were trying to make do without the sport that made the Great One famous. "We have the CFL on," a hostess said apologetically. Few had taken her up on the offer. Three-down football has trouble competing with the NFL in these parts, and it has no chance of replacing hockey. "In Canada, it's a big thing to play hockey." "It's a Canadian disgrace," said Derrick McLoed, who joined Conway at the bar. "As soon as you're old enough, they put a pair of skates on you," he said about Canadian kids. McLeod said he dates the decline of hockey to the day the NHL moved its offices from Montreal to New York — a national betrayal unmatched since Gretzky was traded from Edmonton to Los Angeles. USC players face cheating charges The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Two freshman football players at the University of Southern California are being investigated for having someone else take their college entrance exams, it was reported yesterday. Delon Washington, a backup tail-back who gained 109 yards in the Trojans' season-opening 24-17 victory over Washington, and Kenny Cooper, a redshirt tight end, were being investigated for academic fraud, the Los Angeles Times reported in yesterday's editions. Washington and Cooper could each lose a year's eligibility if their American College Testing exams are invalidated. an athletic department spokesman called Washington's situation "day-to-day, or week-to-week," the newspaper report said. Unidentified sources told the newspaper that security personnel from ACT headquarters in Iowa City, Iowa, challenged the players' exams because of marked increases from their first to second test scores. Such challenges are normal when a student retakes an exam and improves by about five points. Telephone listings could not be found for Washington or Cooner. The two men have submitted hand-writing samples and fingerprints to ACT officials, according to sources. The writing samples and prints from the second tests allegedly did not match those taken from the players. Washington, a 5-foot-11, 190-pound tailback from Kimball High School in Dallas, has been withheld from football competition. USC announced Washington's situation Sept. 23 citing "eligibility questions." There has been no update from the school on his situation. As a redshirt player, Cooper, a 6-3. 265-pound tight end from Plant City, Fla., normally practices with the team but does not play in games. The circumstances of the players are not identical, and each case is being reviewed separately, a source said. If the test results are invalidated, USC would be held accountable only if there is evidence of school involvement. The NCAA and Pacific 10 Conference are not investigating USC, although each group has been apprised of the situation. Standardized college entrance exams, such as the ACT and the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT), are used in part to determine initial eligibility for NCAA Division I athletes. Academic standards — commonly known as Proposition 48 — require freshmen to score at least 17 on the ACT or at least 700 on the SAT to be eligible. INTRAMURAL FLOOR HOCKEY Managers' Meeting Monday, October 3 8:00 PM-115 Robinson Entry Fee-$45/Team Instant scheduling Tuesday, October 4& Wednesday, October 5 8:30-400 308 Robinson Instant scheduling is first come, first serve for managers who attend the Managers' Meeting. All other teams may sign up in Robinson room 308 at 2:00 pm on Wednesday, October 5, if space is available Divisions: Men's Women's Co-Rec 1-800-COLLECT America's Inexpensive Way To Call Someone Collect. Managers' Meeting Mon.October 3,1994 7:00PM 115 Robinson M Entry Fee $30/Team Instant Scheduling: Tuesday, October 4 & Wednesday,October 5 8:30-4:00 308 Robinson Instant Scheduling is first come,first serve for managers who attend the Managers' Meeting. All other teams may sign up in Robinson 308 at 2:00PM on Wed. Oct.5 if space is available. DIVISIONS: MEN'S WOMEN'S CO-REC 1-800-COLLECT America's Inexpensive Way To Call Someone Collect. VOLLEYBALL --- .