6 University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 25, 1992 Forum: Environmental Issues in Central America 7:30 p.m.1992 in the Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Central America Week 1992: Lives in the Balance BUNGEE JUMPING Experience the Thrill of a Lifetime! Certain Restrictions Apply (913) 341-0003 VERTIGO VENTURES, INC. Have you discovered The Castle Tea Room 843-1151 Call ahead for reservations. HANGAR NO.4 Begins April 1st Steak Night EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT 4-9 PM $7.50 includes baked potato and salad CLUB Presents DAYS INN LAWRENCE 2009 IOWA STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66046 9133 843-9100 drink specials nightly Beer-n-Brat EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 4-9PM $2.50 choice of brat or sausage and a tap draft The Jazzhaus 926 1/2 Massachusetts 749-3320 Wednesday & Thursday, March 25 & 26 Chubby Carrier Friday & Saturday, March 27 & 28 Room Full of Walters Mondays & Wednesdays $2.50 Pitchers & 50¢ Draws Open 7 days a week---- 4:00 p.m. to 2:00a.m. Friday afternoons--chow line starts at 5:30! If you buy the best you'll never be disappointed! Via Spiga ARENSBERG'S SHOES One step ahead! Open evenings 'til 8:30 Open Sunday 12.00 to 5:00 Quality footwear for the whole family since 1958 825 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence We're Changing... TO SUIT YOU! Campbell's Wants You Satisfied With... 3. Our Styles At Campbell's you can expect all the above plus something else. - Spring Suits - 2. Our Quality 1. Our Selection 4. Our Prices The Best Service! Which means our alterations are absolutely FREE -- and no one beats our values! Sale priced from $199.00 values to $325 Open Mon-Sat 9:30-6 Thurs. til 8:30 Sun. 1-5 841 Massachusetts CAMPAIGN'92 Brown gains surprise victory in Connecticut; Bush prevails The Associated Press HARTFORD, Conn. — Challenger Jerry Browny scored a startling upset against Bill Clinton in the Connecticut presidential primary yesterday, slowing the front-runner's march toward the Democratic nomination. President Bush swept easily, as expected, to Republican victory with two-thirds of the vote against dormant rival Patrick Buchanan and the nagging protest vote. The Democratic verdict, a three-point victory for Brown, who claimed 38 percent of the vote, was a surprise stall in the Clinton campaign despite the Arkansas governor's claim that he had expected the contest to be tight. The Connecticut upset instantly raised the stakes in the New York primary, the next significant contest, two weeks away. Brown said that he had won Connecticut because people wanted change and that he was the vehicle for change. "This thing is now coming to New York, and this will be the battle of where the party's going." Brown said in Brooklyn, N.Y. He said he had been doubted, ignored and ridiculed for his anti-establishment campaign. But Clinton still holds a commanding delegate lead of more than seven to one over Brown. And he and Brown each were winning 21 delegates in Connecticut, under an apportionment system based on congressional district vote shares. Clinton, in West Orange, N.J., said before the polls closed that people did not want the primary process to be over. "They sure don't want it to be taken away from them, and I don't either," Clinton said. "I've always expected it to go through to New Jersey and California." The New Jersey and California primaries are June 2. Brown, asked whether he had slowed Clinton's momentum, said, "The people have slowed it down." With 94 percent of the precincts counted in the Democratic primary, Brown had 60,445 votes or 38 percent; Clinton had 56,473 or 35 percent; and Last Thursday, Tsongs announced he was suspending his campaign because he did not have money to continue. At home in Lowell, Mass., Tsongas said his share of the vote was a product of momentum and a validation of his message of economic realism. Paul Tsongas had 31.870 or 20 percent. "It shows you what happens when I don't campaign," he joked. "I think next time I won't run." "Cutting spending is a tough call, especially in a state where the economy is hurting," Bush said. One cut was a submarine contract that accounts for thousands of jobs in Connecticut. Tsongas was winning 11 delegates. After the primary, Bush said his victory came from voters who understood that a president had to make difficult decisions, even when those decisions hurt. Tsongas was winning 11 delegates In the Republican primary, the outcome had Bush with 63,105 votes or 67 percent, and Buchanan with 20,983 votes or 22 percent. Nine percent was uncommitted, and 2 percent voted for David Duke. Californian refuses to yield in campaign The Associated Press "I am so tired of this," Brown said. "This doesn't look like somebody waging a protest, does it? I want to win the nomination. It's that simple." NEW YORK — Jerry Brown turns livid at the notion he might be just a noisemaker, waging his angry Democratic presidential bid not with the aim of winning but with some other, unspoken goal in mind. Still, Brown sometimes sounds as if he may be thinking of some form of long-term movement, perhaps along Down seven to one in the race for delegates, the former California governor said he was still in the race, with big primaries ahead in his home state as well as in New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio. the lines of Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition or Ralph Nader's Consumer Cause. "I will not be silenced. I will not be stopped until we, the American people, take back what is ours," Brown told a crowd at a rally in New Haven. Brown won't say if he'll keep crusading against big-money politics if Clinton wins the nomination. He is silent about any future plans. Brown concedes he must win some big-state primaries, such as New York on April 7, which he called a critical turning point for his campaign. "We've got to start winning sooner or later. You guys won't talk to me as it is." Brown told reporters in New York, bemoaning what he calls his "black hole of media existence." Brown says he thinks New York is winnable in part because he has several labor endorsements, including one picked up yesterday from the president of the 165,000-member Teamsters local. The state's Communications' Workers of America and Sheetmetal Workers are with him, too, and plan a huge labor rally for him next week in Tarrv town, N.Y. Brown's infuriated reaction to doubts about his prospects is a switch from the campaign days in New Hampshire when he would dismiss questions about his long odds with nothing more than a casual shrug. "I'd like to see what my odds are now," Brown said. "Let's call Las Vegas and see." Call for Peer Education 864-3710 HE WOULDN'T GIVE UP SHOOTING UP... SO I GAVE HIM UP. I don't know he shared needles. All I know is that he shot up. That's bad enough. And he didn't care about me to stop. He knew we could both get AIDS, and I begged him to stop I even asked him to get some counseling and drug treatment. I did all I could, but he just wouldn't listen. So I left. National AIDS Hotline: 1-800-342-AIDS Service en Español: 1-800-344-7432 TTY-Doaf Access: 1-800-243-7889 Paid for by: Student Senate AIDS Task Force AMERICA RESPONDS TO AIDS 1-800-342-AIDS Stress. You can manage to control it. Being a student can stress you out. You can't get rid of stress, but you can turn it into something positive. There are two types of stress. - "Eustress" is good. You feel it before taking a test you are prepared for, before giving a speech, or before interviewing for a job. It helps you gear up and function at your peak. - "Distress" is not-so-goal. You may feel distressed after the break up of a relationship or after failing a class. You don't feel good, you can't sleep, you're irritable, or you overindulge. How do you deal with stress? Recognize it. Balance work with play. Plan ahead. Eat a well balanced diet. Exercise. Most of all ... relax. For more information on stress management call Health Education at 864-9570. Health Center 864-9500 Health Education 864-9570 We Care for KU Regular Clinic Hours: M-F 4:30-4:30/Sa 8-11:30a M-F 4:30-10p/Sa 11:30a 4:30p/Su 8:30a-4:30p