10 Tuesday March 30, 1993 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ... MEN SEEKING WOMEN 2 good-looking, in shape SWMs looking for 2 good-looking SWMs to pass the time with. Enjoy drinking, partying, & staying up until all hours of the night. Ski girls need not apply *Call r01234* Attractive SWM dark hair & eyes, *6* 290 ls seeks honest, emotionally mature, and caring woman w/ desire to meet a clean cut, caring, and dedicated man w/ Traditional values. Call box Cool guy, secure, easy going, attractive, open minded, and all that other good stuff. Seeking one intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Dionian vassus. Box #10329 He Brillo Shidul Black hair - a bad knee. I tend to clear my throat a lot. I only have one shirt, and sometimes my voice cracks; but I can make people understand in taking an invitation, call box, call 10202. Kimete? If that gets your attention then keep readin- g, SWM 28, sandy blonde, green eyes, bright smile, dark eyelid, dark eyelid, dark eye-lid single white female, who is attractive and open-minded, but sometimes feels like a fish out of water, Cali. SWM. Smart, smart, honest, open, gentle, good lookin', moral guy seeking an honest, moral girl, moral guy for friendship or dating, moral girl like Paul Sumner, moral girl like the Opera? Bea's days? Say if you, if you thought you'd never answer a personal ad, call me I never thought I place one! Call Box You will be charged $1.95 per minute To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778 2 SWFs from a small, Kansas town, friends since birth, both under 25, but feel like we've been at KU forever, would like to meet me w/ dry sense of humor, clean cut, intelligent, & down to earth. Like long walks, movies, talking on the phone, can scare you to scam to get us rich quick. Call box #20142 DCWF. 40-ish. Addictions are out of self-honesty, insight, communication, and faith in. Non-smoking, non-drinking, vegetarian, creatine, bodybuilding, and caregiving; working with good sense of humor, considering building caring relationship with S/DCWM with similar interests and values. Children and pets ok Single Hispanic female 18 years old cutie petite, long brown hair recently broke up between her ears and her face, male between the arms of 18-23 who enjoys walking, jogging, weight lifting, dancing and partying call box s MEN SEEKING MEN Gay white male seeks flings and possible relationships with other gay white males. All interesting couples with other gay males. cars repaint. GWM. It is hard to understand why so many other people find it interesting to look there to share things with and do a lot of different things together. So spring is right around the corner and so is beautiful weather, so get out of the rain. Put a big smile on your face to make us feel so alive. I do not smoke. You have to be a non-smoker. light drinker and have a sense of humor. If you read down, give me a call. Box 80044 Common abbreviations M Male A Asian F Female J Jewish D Divorced C Christian S Single G Gay W White L Lesbian B Black L Hispanic H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker Cool guy, secure, easy going, attractive, open-minded, and that other all good stuff. Seeking 1 intelligent, healthy, handsome individual for Dionysian quest. Box #3006. HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad 1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Snaffar Fint Hall, 864-4358. 2. You place an and in the Laptay Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number record to receive a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will 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. 1. Check out an ad 2. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them. To check out an ad 2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mail-box 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. Voices prompt 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. Photos compare past with present Group of geologists retrace 1923 journey to study Grand Canyon By James J. Reece Korean staff writer In 1923, about a dozen men in five 16-foot wooden boats waged a 225-mile battle against the rapids of the Colorado River. Kansan staff writer The group, including KU geologist R.C. Moore, took more than 80 photographs of the Grand Canyon in search of a dam site. In 1991, staff members from the Kansas Geological Survey retraced the journey hoping to photograph the canyon from the same vantage points and identify geological changes in the canyon. by flood waters. The result is "The Canyon Revisited: Photographing the 1923 Grand Canyon Expedition," a photograph display at the Museum of Natural History. The display opened Saturday and runs until Sept. 26. "The idea is to use the new photographs to look for changes that have taken place since the original photographs were taken," said Rex Buchanan, assistant director for publications of the Kansas Geological Survey. Changes range from minor erosion to the movement of massive boulders But some scenes have shown little change in detail, such as rocks and plants resting in the same location as they did 88 years ago. Buchanan said the 1964 completion of the Glen Canyon Dam, which is upstream from the photograph sites. This allowed the change in the canyon features. He said the dam decreased flooding, allowing plant growth on the banks of the river. The dam also kept sediment from flowing downstream, causing beach erosion. Those changes obscured many camera sites and made it difficult to reproduce photographs, Buchanan said. But the help of survey geologist Donald Baars, who has about 25 trips down the Colorado River, made it easier to find the 1923 photograph sites and reproduce 45 of 80 pictures Baars said hazards of the journey ranged from the usual risk of white-water travel to the unusual risk of pik canyon rattlesnakes. But photographer John Charlton said the risk was nothing compared with that of the 1923 expedition. "Prior to the construction of the dam, it was a life and death proposition to go down the river," Charlton said. He said the 1923 group was delayed for three days because one of its boats capsized. Crews work during break By Jess DeHaven Kansan staff writer While students are enjoying themselves on spring break, KU and Lawrence crews were hard at work on repairs and around campus. City and campus crews have faced projects ranging from potholes to continuing construction. The crews used the break to catch up on maintenance work. Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said his workers spent much of the break patching up potholes near Memorial Stadium. Tom Orzulak, maintenance manager for the Lawrence public works department, said the city also had been hard at work on pothole repairs. He said work was done on 11th and 12th streets and on West Campus. Unions, said the lobby area of the Kansas Union should be complete by the end of April. The construction has forced the Union's candy counter and information center to sell candy and stamps out of a popcorn cart in the lobby. Pat Beard manager of building services for the Kansas and Burge "The candy counter and information center should open on Thursday, and it will be in about the same location for construction began," said said. starter Muckey, assistant director of facilities operations, said that core samples from Wescow were drilled to determine what was causing the swelling and that results of the test were expected in about three weeks. The ongoing problem of swelling floors on the bottom level of Wescoe Hall also received attention. Crews also worked on waterproofing at Snow Hall and painting in the Smith Hall auditorium. BRIEFS Workshop to cover election guidelines The Student Senate election commission will be holding a candidate workshop at 7 onight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Missouri law requires that Diane King, election commissioner, said the workshop would address campaigning rules and regulations for the election, which will be held April 14 and 15. "We will answer all of the candida tates' questions and spell out everything in the rules," king said. King said that the workshop would specifically address the guideline handed down by the office of the executive vice chancellor, which prohibits campaign posters and materials from being exhibited in campus classrooms. King said that presidential, vice presidential and senatorial candidates for the spring election were encouraged to attend. She added that any student interested in the election process also could attend. Foundation names KU as site for research The National Science Foundation has named KU's department of electrical and computer engineering as an NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduate site for the summers of 1993, 1994 and 1995. The program will bring 10 under- graduate students from around the nation to the University for a 10-week program. Projects will include artificial intelligence, electromagnetics, high-speed networks, intelligent design and radar systems. According to an NSF review committee, KU's department of electrical and computer engineering was chosen to play host to the program because of its research base, faculty strength, recruiting plan and long history of involving undergraduate students in research. "We are pleased and excited about this grant," said Carl Locke dean of engineering. "It will allow the faculty to work with a group of bright undergraduates in their research projects. The students, in turn, have a unique opportunity to further their education and learn about research." Compiled by Kansan staff writers Jess Dehaven and Brett Riggs. solutions from your Apple Campus Reseller: affordable laser-quality printers The new Apple StyleWriter II. Apple LaserWriter Select 300 $730⁽¹⁰⁾ Now there’s a faster, easier way to get great-looking papers—a price students can afford. The new, compact Apple StyleWriter II printer delivers laser-quality output while still fitting within your budget. And the new LaserWriter Select 300 gives you full-fledged laser printing. KU Bookstores Computer Store Burge Union Level Two 864-5627 VISA Apple StyleWriter II $299000 Apple Style WRITER $299 for text and graphics that look sharp, crisp, professional. See both printers now at the KU Bookstores Computer Store. Where you'll get special student pricing. And discover the power to make your work look better than ever. The power to be your best.