10 Thursday, April 1, 1993 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ... Attractive athletic single white male 22. dark hair wedge hairstyle w / a sense of humor of a woman who likes romantic爱情, movies, pictures. Must be at least 18 years old. Play games. Pick up the phone and take a chance. #10331 Attractive SWM dark hair & eyes. 6' x 190 lbs. seeks honest, emotionally mature, and caring woman w/ desire to meet a clean car, caring, and man w/ traditional values. Call box #10325 Cool guy, secure, easy going, attractive, open minded, and all that other good stuff. Seeking one intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Dionysian guests. Box #10329 I have Brilio Plato Black hair - a bad knee. I tend to threat my a lot. I encourage one shirt and sometimes my voice cracks but I can make people laugh. If interested in taking a chance call bag *a* Kismet! If that gets our attention then keep reading. She is a woman with low intelligence. Seeking dark eye deep single female, who is attractive and open-minded, but sometimes feels like a fish out of water. Call SWCM, Grad student, 31, $^{6}$², Athletic and good looking. I like traveling, cyclic, nature, quiet nights by the fire, adventure, great conversation with students. Excellent for studying, taking Catholic SWCM 24-32 $^{5}$² or taller, athlete, who is intelligent, honest & caring who sharesSimply this book is really like to meet a quality girl Call # 810323 SWIM 10, amazingly handsome, couch potato SVM for me & scratch my belly, call to go Kevk on my phone! You will be charged $1.95 per minute Common abbreviations M Male A Asian F Female J Jewish D Divorced C Christian S Single C Gay W Wing G Yay B Black L Lesbian H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778 SWM. Sweet, mature, honest, open, gentle, good-looking 'moral' guy seeking an honest, confident job. Don't be nervous. Do you like to listen? Billy Joon? Phantom of the Opera? Beesy? Sunny Day? If so, call if you thought you'd never answer a personal ad, then I new thought I'd place one. Call Box #16327 SWM 21, 61*, attractive J-Crew type with dark hair, enjoys sports, movies and is musically talented. Encourages an energetic honest love for SWM 18, 62* for friendship and dating. Long hair a plus. #10233 WOMEN SEEKING MEN 2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both in 3rd, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet men w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down to earth. Like long walks, talk on the phone, & trying any seem to get us rich quick. Call皂 #20142 DCWF, 105. Addictions are out. Self-honesty, insight, communication, and faith are in. Nonsmoking, non-drinking, vegetarian, creative, and respectful. A positive attitude with good sense of humor, considering building caring relationship with S/D/CWF with similar traits. Children and pets ok. Thank! Bks #20148 Single Hispanic female 18 years old petite girl, long brown hair, skin tone of medium or light blue male between the ages of 18-23 who enjoys walking, jogging, weight lifting, dancing and partying call box a Cool guy, secure, easy going, attractive, open minded, and that all other good stuff. Seeking an intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Donovan guests. Box #20066. Gay white male seeks flings and possible relationship goals. Interested All interesting. Vail Coffee box no. 2006. GWM, seeks interesting and fun companion with interests in Theater, film, music, romantic dinners, and a relationship like to cook. Looking for someone who is enthusiastic, insecure closest cases need not a $9000. GMW. It’s hard to understand why so many other girls are out here to find someone to share their summer nights. But in spring, So is spring is right around the corner and so is beautiful summer — get out of the winter blues! Put a guitar on your table and dance to the music we can meet we can hit it off well. I’m sincere, non-smoker, light drinker and has a lot of friends. Box 800658. WM well at last it's spring, it's here! Let's put a big smile on you. How much fun is it? Come on guys let's get better acquainted before it too late. The school term is over and the holidays are coming. I missed your calls, try again. Box 60067. Totally self absorbed artist can hold a phrase in Trio Amos, Kate Bush, Gharib Rosiel dislike Madonna, k.d.lang, and多难 dyslexie. Seeing a feminine friend with potential. Box 400 HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad 1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Staircase-Flint Hall, 864-4358 2. You'll place an ad in the *Jaylak Network section of the Kapan* (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voices must remain in the system for 21 days. 3. After your ad runs in the Kansan you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you. 4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place. To check out an ad 1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them. 2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute. 3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached. Med Center dean retires Physician urged students to become family practitioners By Ben Grove Kansan staff writer Fresh, young medical school residents who too often became engrossed in the clinical aspects of their profession had a lot to learn from James Price. "He would often ask, 'Well, what does the patient want?' said Dennis Tetze, one of Price's former students at the University of Kansas Medical Center and now a family practice physician in Topeka. "He focuses on the needs of the patient as a human being and not just a clinical object." Price, executive dean of the Med Center, will retire at the end of the day today after 41 years as a physician, 15 of them at the Med Center. Price, 66, leaves behind a legacy of encouraging medical school students to pursue careers in family practice in an age when more glamorous specialties seem far more attractive. "I was even successful in persuading 50 percent of my children," said Price, whose son Richard and daughter Lynn are family practitioners. Price's retirement comes at a time when medical officials say that more than half the state's 105 counties are medically under-served. Most of those are rural counties. "We need to produce access to health care and to do that we're going to have to make it possible for physician extenders to live outside the metropolitan areas, live a good life and make a living," he said. Price was a family practitioner for 26 years in his hometown of Brush, Colo., before teaching at the University of Colorado and coming to the Med Center in 1978. He became head of the department of family practice in 1982 and was named executive dean in 1990. Price was also the residency director when Brad Phipps, a Lawrence physician, was a resident at the Med Center from 1982 to 1985. Phipps said that Price was "warm and fatherly" and that Price was a valuable mentor. "Establishing a family practice in a university setting is hard to do alongside all the other specialties," Phipps said. "He was a large part of making that a strong residency program." Price made a curricular change at the Med Center that brought all medical students into a required rotation in the family practice department. Tietze said Price would be missed. Price said he wanted to travel, write and still keep up his medical skills, perhaps in a foreign country, after retiring. Sebastian Faro, professor of obstetrics and gynecology, will act as interim dean until a permanent dean is selected. Those said I see women possess "those in us in Kansas have really appreciated having him with his kind of focus on family practice and primary care," he said. "I hope the Med School can find someone with that kind of mentality because that really seems to be a push of the future." Putting Kansas in movies State commission, KU department draw filmmakers Stephany Kimball Special to the Kansan Last year, the state earned $9,031,300 from filmmaking—$60 for every $1 invested, according to the commission. During the past 11 years, the Kansas Film Commission has recruited several film-making companies to produce movies and commercials in the towns and wheat fields of Kansas. Just last year, it brought 32 projects and more than $9 million to this Midwestern state. The commission, a part of the Kansas Division of Travel and Tourism, met last night at Oldfather Studios, 1621 W. Ninth St. Its members stressed the need for Lawrence citizens to take more active roles in recruiting film companies to shoot scenes in the town. "Productions mean big dollars," said Jerry Jones, former director of the commission. "Our goal is to try to share knowledge so we can maintain and exceed '92 revenues." Last fall, Douglas County became home to the cast and crew of three made-for-television movies. "Dead Before Dawn," based in Lawrence; "I Can Make You Love Me," starring Brooke Shields, and "Why Have They Taken Our Children?" starring Karl Malden, have all been broadcast this year. The commission was started 11 years ago after the film "The Day After" was shot in Lawrence with participation from much of the community. The film told the story of a nuclear holocaust and was Lawrence's first chance to show its potential to the movie-making world. Since the 1982 filming of "The Day After", Douglas County has become a prime candidate for several film companies because of its location and reputation of cooperating with movie companies, said Vicky Henley, director of the commission. The KU department of film also benefits from the moviemakers because they often ask film students to fill in as extras and production assistants in area films, which gives students practical experience. Henley said that filmmakers view the film department as one of the area's assets because they can reduce the size of the staff that they have to fly to Kansas for productions. Chuck Berg, professor of theater and film, said that students were able to function more effectively on movie staffs with the experience they gained from working with the equipment in Oldfather Studios. Film majors had worked out of recently demolished Joliffe Hall before moving into the new studios two years ago. Since the move, the school has expanded to 150 students. It is part of the department of theatre and film in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. 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We offer completely furnished Studios, 1,2,3, and 4 bedroom apartments, 2 and 3 level townhomes, all designed with you, the KU student, in mind Campus Place 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 MOUNTAIN DEW Congratulates the Jayhawks for reaching the championship Semi-Finals! and join the fun in New Orleans for: NEW ORLEANS Friday, April 2, 5 to 7 PM ★ Collegiate 3-pt. Shoot Out Featuring: ★ "Get Vertical" Leap Contest (Chance to win 1994 Championship Tickets) ★ Make the hoop for Jimmy V. campaign The Diet Pepsi uh huh! Girls ★ College Basketball Coaches & Stars 5th Annual College Basketball Slam Dunk and 3-pt. Shooting Championship Date/Time: Sunday, April 4th, 8:00 pm Where: Fogelman Arena, Tulane University Tickets: $10.00 At: Ticketmaster - 522-5555 or Tulane: 861-WAVE