THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday March 2, 1988 Vol. 98,No.109 (USPS 650-640) Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus. About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication. Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the Class meets at airport to question KKK By James Buckman Kansan staff writer A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport. Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February. But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise. Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday. "The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with." He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class. "They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said. In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class canceled. Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause. "I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me." He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and expose racism. "It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write. "We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigotry in the face for an hour." Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience. "It was absolutely both fascinating, and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it." See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1 Knights tell KU students about goals By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal OPEN HOUSE STUDENTS, STAFF, & FACULTY NOW is the time to reserve your COMPLETELY FURNISHED studio, 1, 2, 3, or 4 Bdrm. apartment for Next Semester! Saturday, March 5, 1988 1:00-5:00 p.m. Hanover Place 14th & Massachusetts Summit House 1105 Louisiana 7th & Florida and... OREAD TOWNHOUSES Many great locations Coldwater Flats 413 W. 14th Street Craig Sands/KANSAN Tanglewood 951 Arkansas Sundance II Brand New Ready for fall semester! AFFORDABLE RENTALS HIGHLANDS 13th & Ohio Orchard Corners Apartments 15th & Kasold For more information go to or call: TANGLEWOOD 749-2415 CAMPUS PLACE 841-1429 HANOVER 841-1212 ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226 SUNDANCE 841-5255 - On bus route, or close to KU - Energy Efficient - On site managers - Custom Furnishings - Laundry Facilities - Many Built-ins - Private Parking Whether you prefer to live alone or with roommates, we have a place for you, designed with you in mind. See you Saturday!!! MASTERCRAFT Professional Management and Maintenance Company 842-4455 gle at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan. the Klan an "upbeat at he had been a member line or 10 months. He said cause he was "looking for verimenting." en a member since 1981. joined after witnessing whites in Miami. the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of e Klan was to promote See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1 ate ng should be done to get them urriculum." ill will be heard on the House robably within two weeks, i said. The Speaker of the secles when the bill will be Branson and Lowther said ould be considerable debate loor. the speaker brings it up on nard, there will certainly beiry stormy debate." Branson associated Press supplied some ion for this story. g army sloyals by violence in a middle-class lhood near the bank dis- in Tuesday, security agents at an investigation cordi station or opposed. Radio broadcast neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations. instrators gathered yesterday he four-lane street in front of tion, set up barricades of tion and set fire to a mini- riot police chased the protest- side streets and apartmen- gs Chunks of concrete were used at least in at least the apartment house. e fired tear-gas grendes and d tear gas into the buildings ortable tanks, filling the entire orhood with the acrid, stinging officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to its, "You'll come out like cocks!" did, and reporters on the law no one injured. pokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters esman Franklin Castrellon Associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both out no bombs were found. 2 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988