CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, April 18; 1985 Page Roy Stewart/KANSAN Elayne Simpson, St. Louis sophomore, left, watches as Lynn Heller, a nurse, checks her blood pressure at the Wellness Week Booth on Wesco Beach. Heller said yesterday that many students had been having their blood pressure checked during Wellness Week. The week ends tomorrow. Healthy food wins contest By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter A lettuce leaf and half a mushroom were the only remnants of Pallen Lee's prize-winning cold chicken niccata yesterday. "I was really excited, but there were only eight entries," said Lee, Leavow junior. Lee was one of the winners in the Wellness Week Recipe Contest, one of the features of a Wellness Week Booth set up on Wescoe Beach for four hours yesterday. Wellness Week, sponsored by the office of residential programs and the Association of University Residence Halls, is a series of activities that emphasize physical and physical health. It started Saturday and will end tomorrow. These services for her, chicken recipe and for a low-calorie strawberry drink recipe. She said she chose the recipes because they were fasted and lasted good during warm weather. SARAH HIRSCH, TOPEKA senior, was another winner in the recipe contest. Hirsch, a breakfast cook at Sellars Hall, won $150 for his recipe and a restaurant, 1801 Massachusetts St. for her bran muffin recipe. "It's good to start off your day with a good breakfast, so I try to make things that are fairly healthy," Hirsch said. Mark Denke, assistant director of residential programs and one of the judges in the recipe contest, said all the food tasted good and called the booth a success. As temperatures climbed into the eighties, students clustered around the Wellness Booth to get blood pressure readings or to leaf through pamphlets offering health and fitness tips. "I think it has increased awareness, which is the primary concept of wellness," Denke said. and THE BOOTH PROVIDED blood pressure testing, sign-up sheets for blood donations and free orange juice. Three-year-old Alex, a newcomer to Wescoe Beach, sat with his fishing cap on, drinking his cup of orange juice, oblivious to the students who stopped by the booth. orange juice A group of pre-schoolers from Edna A. Hill Child Development Lab in Haworth Hall were among the booth patrons who enjoyed the free juice. Curt Baxter, Salina sophomore, was one of the students who stopped by the booth for a blood pressure reading. NOW OFFERS NEW GOURMET BAKED POTATOES!! 1511 W.23rd Dine-in or Carry out 84E-ROLL 30¢ off any Gourmet Baked Potato Pepper Bef Cream Shrimp Vegetable Combination Mushroom Chicken Cashew Chicken Broccoli & Beef Spicy Peanut Chicken Graffiti allude to movement By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter Red, spray-painted graffiti yesterday morning were scrubbed from sidewalks near Wescoe, Strong and Fraser halls, and the information booth in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall, Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance, said yesterday. Graffiti also were removed from the sidewalk in front of the Kansas Union, said Ray Snyder, custodial service manager. service manager. "The graffiti read, 'Americanism is never have to say you're sorry, 5-29-84. ' Snyder said. 5-296 The graffiti apparently alluded to a national anti-war movement that is planning a "No More Business as Usual" day on April 29, but a member of a local group that has ties to the movement said the group was not responsible for the vandalism. Stu Schafer, a member of Praxis, and member of the Lawrence No. More Business as Usual organizing, committee, said he did not know who had painted the graffiti. Porter said that facilities operations workers had received a call reporting the graffiti early yesterday morning. of preventing World War III," Tang said. "WE JUST FILED a report with the police and cleaned it up with thinner." Porter said. had pennies in the gloves. "It may be someone who doesn't even support the group," Schafer said. Some of the graffiti was obscene. Some stated, "No more business as usual." Most included the date — April 29. "No More Business as Usual" is the slogan and name of a national anti-war organization in San Francisco, said Stephanie Tang, a spokesman for the national office of No More Business as Usual. The officers are in the Union at the office of Praxis, a leftist student organization. student organization. "April 29 is a coordinated day of activities focused on the basic theme SCHAFER, A LAWRENCE graduate student, said that a planning conference for No More Business as Usual was scheduled for April 22 to decide what would be done on the national protest day. Literature sent to Praxis from the national headquarters of No More Business As Usual explains that April 29 will be "a day that deliberately disrupts and shuts down as much as possible of the daily routine through which we are lurching toward global war." Bathe With Your Friends... In Our Private Hot Tub. 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