6 University Daily Kansan / Tuesday March 24,1992 BUNGEE JUMPING Experience the Thrill of a Lifetime! Certain Restrictions Apply (913) 341-0003 VERTIGO VENTURES, INC. State Radiator Don't Buy New When We Can Repair Yours! We Recycle: • Freon • Car Parts Dickinson Dickinson 841-8600 1111-3555 On the Road to Saving Our World! STOP,OR MY MOM WILLS SHOOT:(PG-13) (+5) (15) (7) (20) (15) MY COUSIN VINNY(R) (CO2) (4) (7) (8) (9) BASIC INSTINCT(R) HAND THATROCKS THE CRADLE (R) BLAME IT ON THE BELLBOY (PG-13) 15.95 $7.30 FRIEDGREENTOMATOES (PG-13) Will still offer students the $3.50 price at all evening shows. Prime-Timer Set (/) Senior Citizen Anytime BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 1 MONTH INTRO. Only $19⁹⁵ Wayne's World (PG-13) 520 720 920 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 8415191 HILLCREST 925 IOWA Lawmowner Man (R) 500.715 7930 Silicone of the Lambes® 500.715 7930 American Mile (R) 5.007.15 930 Midline Man (PG-13) 500.715 7930 Article 99 (R) 5.150 7930 CINEMA TWIN 118 8 IOWA Once Upon a Crime (F) 720 / 930 Beauty and the Beast (G) 530 My Girl 530 / 720 / 930 *Self Defense *Self Discipline *Self Confidence *Balance & Coordination *Fitness & Weight Control Ask us about a high energy & very affordable Nutrition/weight loss system. SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Tsongas campaign could survive By Gayle Osterberg Kansan staff writer State organizers for Paul Tsongas' presidential campaign have not given up hope that the former Massachusetts senator could be elected. Andy Sandler, who heads Kansas' effort to elect Tsongas from an Overland Park office, said yesterday that a citizens' campaign would continue if Tsongas collected at least 15 percent of vote in today's Connecticut primary. their votes for him at the Democratic National Convention unless Tsongas Sandler said he participated by phone yesterday in a meeting with representatives from 14 other states who were planning to continue the campaign with private donations. Although Tsonas announced last week that he would suspend his official campaign because of growing debt, he still is on the ballot for the remaining state primaries. The delegates he already has earned are bound to cast "My job for the time being is to keep people together and persuade them that the campaign is still viable," he said. "People are saying 'What? He's still running? What's the deal?' This is the kind of damage control we're dealing with. We're trying to knock away a brick wall of public misunderstanding." Sandler said about 1,000 volunteers in Connecticut were preparing for today's primary. He said Tsongas was expected to do well in Connecticut before he made the announcement to suspend his campaign, and that volunteers would consider 15 percent of the vote a victory. "We want to see how they do there before we really begin an organized effort in Kansas," he said. The Kansas presidential primary is April 7. Some Tsongas supporters are some of the active a citizen-only campaign will be. Ralph Nicol, Lawrence resident, had been active in the state campaign before the announcement, but said he would not commit himself to continuing the effort. "My feelings are that I am really up in the air," Nicol said. "I still have doubts about the other two candidates, but my biggest priority is to beat the republicans in the fall. I'm not sure a candidate will be much tough. Any available Democrat is far better than four more years of the Republican party." Lori Sparkman, Lawrence graduate student, contacted Sandler after a song'songs' announcement. She said she read about it to offer her help with the campaign. "After the announcement I was real- ly shocked and disappointed," she said. "I had intended to call and get involved, but I just never did. I should have done something sooner." Student to study Decemberist movement in Russia By Ranjit Arab Kansan staff writer History graduate student Bill Drummond thinks fate gave him a chance to study in Russia, three years after a bookstore clerk introduced him to the works of a noted Russian scholar. While visiting New York in 1986, Drummond went to the Kamkin Bookstore on Fifth Avenue looking for a book on a subject that had interested him for years; the Decemberist movement of 1825 in Russia. The movement unsuccessfully attempted to overthrow Russian Czar Nicholas I. The participants were sent into exile. The woman working behind the bookstore counter was a former student of a leading Russian Decemberist scholar, Nathan Eidelman. Although Drummond originally was looking for one book, the woman introduced him to several books written by her former teacher. Three years later, as a graduate student at the University of Kansas, Drummond was walking through Wescoe Hall when he saw a flyer that said Eidelman would be speaking on campus. Drummond spoke with Eidelman who invited him to study in Russia. He plans to stay for a year, on a trip that is financed by several fellowships. This will be Drummond's second trip to Russia. Drummond plans to research for his doctoral dissertation the effect the Decemberist movement had on the non-noble wives of the exiled participants. Not much research exists on the involved in the movement, he said. "We tend to think that the women had rather Victorian lives," he said. "I hope to change the view of women in America to create a social drama around them." Because Eidelman arranged for him to study with another leading Decemberist scholar, Sergie Mironenko, Drummond said research would not be as difficult as it would be for a foreigner working alone. Norman Saul, professor of Soviet and Eastern European studies, heads drummond's doctoral committee. He said it was not unusual for graduate students to take research trips abroad for their dissertations. Drummond's case is unusual because he coordinated the trip himself and did not rely on a University-graded exchange program, Saul said. "Muchof it is due to his own initiative in terms of contacting people over there and getting the paperwork done," he said. Make sure your road trip proceeds without a hitch. Sometimes road trips can be a little more adventurous than you expect them to be. Which is why you should always pack your AT&T Calling Card. $ \square $ It's all you need to make a call from almost anywhere to anywhere. It's the least expensive way to call state-to-state on AT&T when you can't dial direct. And now, you could also get 10% back on all the long distance calls you make with your card.* $ \square $ The AT&T Calling Card.** It's the best route to wherever you're going. Call more, save more with an AT&T Calling Card. Call 1 800 654-0471, Ext. 5915. - Must make at least $30 worth of AT&T & Long Distance Calls with your AT&T Card per quarter. Calls covered by special AT&T & prising plans are not included. * in addition, campus students may place direct-dial calls using University and ATUS® service on AT&T ATU.