6 Thursday. March 11. 1993 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dickinson Sommersby Pg13 (15) 8/00 & 7/00 & 9/00 Shadow of the Wolf Pg13 (15) 8/15 & 7/15 & 9/20 Ground Gog Day Pg13 (15) 8/10 & 7/10 Loaded Weapon I Pg13 (15) 8/20 & 7/20 Swip Kids Pg13 (15) 8/15 & 7/15 & 9/20 Untamed Heart Pg13 (15) 8/25 & 7/25 Times good Mon. - Thur only 5. 3 Prime Timer Show (1) Senior Citizen Anytime Crown Cinema BEFORE & PM- ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $ 3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Falling Down $ ^{R} $ 5:00 7:30 9:45 Falling Down* HILLCREST 825 IOWA Amos and Andrew P¹³ 9.80 7.15 9.45 Best of the best IIᵃ 11.50 7.30 9.45 Homeward Boundᶜ 10.80 7.90 9.80 Aladinᶜ 5.00 7.00 A Few Good Menᶜ 0.15 Mad Don and Glory ᶜ 11.50 7.30 9.45 CINEMA TWIN 31101OWA 841-5191 ALL SEATS $1.25 RiverRunsThrough ITP$ 5,280,730,845 River Rivers Through it 1.40 Home Alone 2™ $ \mathbb{E} / \mathbf{o} $ 8.90 Scent of a Woman^{R}$ $ \mathbb{E} / \mathbf{o} $ 8.90 KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK AN ECUMENICAL PRAYER EXPERIENCE OF SONG & SCRIPTURE THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1993 9:00 PM DANFORTH CHAPEL "If we concentrate more on our similarities as Christians rather than the differences between denominations, then we can come closer to building this world of trust through the love of Christ." Brother Roger Taize, France Made possible by: Ecumenical Christian Ministries, American Baptist Campus Ministry, Baptist Student Union, Cumberland Castle University, Lutheran Campus Ministry, Lutherton Student Center, United Methodist Church. Healthy Men Needed Receive up to $250 IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company is currently seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study To qualify you must: * be 18-40 years of age * be near ideal body weight * be able to stay in our clinic on two occasions: 30 hrs each * flexible dates during spring break tCallIMTUdow for more information *Call IMTCI today for more information 1-800-669-4682 International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. Lenexa, Kansas The Key To A Safe Break Is In Your Hands! Safe Break '93 Remember these pointers to open your way to a Safe Break: Seat Belts: Always buckle up. Seat belts save lifes! Sunscreen: Use it whether sunny or cloudy, beach or mountains. Safer Sex: Abstinence is the safest sex, but if you choose to have sex, use a latex condom and spermicide with nonoxynol-9. Substances: If you use alcohol - don't drive. If you choose to use drugs, consider the serious consequences. Sunday > Safe Break Banners will be displayed this week at KU ceremonies and fraternities. Sponsored by G Ride the Seat Belt Convincer and watch a demo of the Rollover Machine Monday > Listen to 8 Men Out, an a cappella singing group 11:45.12:00 Kick-Off, Wescoe Beach, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sussex, Connecticut Junior College > Sex, Travel, and Spring Break, McCollum Hall, 7-8 p.m. Refreshments and travel information. Sponsored by Student Housing. > Take the BACCHUS Safe Break Pledge: Sign the pledge to come back safe and you've got a chance to win prizes! > Free Non-Alcoholic Beverages plus buttons, condoms, sunscreen, health-related literature, and more! Rollover Machine. >> Listen to 8 Men Out, an a cappella singing group. Special Monday Event "TIGER BY THE TALE" 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom. An exciting, theatrical performance of humorous, dramatic, and entertaining skits, songs, and dance. This peer education theatre troupe wants you to get the message about your good health! Sponsored by: Watkins Health Center, GAMMA, PARTY, FACTS, KU Police Department, Association of University Residence Halls, Center for Sexual Health, Kansas Highway Patrol, and Safe Break Planning Committee. Series features student plays By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer After entering the campus spotlight last semester, two one-act plays by KU students opened last night as part of KU's William Inge Memorial Theatre Series. Both plays were written in 1991 in a beginning playwriting class taught by Paul Lim, assistant professor of English. English Alternative Theatre presented both plays last year in staged readings. Sean Holland, Kismet senior, and Christina Chang, Hong Kong senior, play Ray and Nancy in the play "Coverage," written by Prairie Village senior Jeff Hopkins. Doug Hesse / KANSAN The plays are "Coverage," by Jeff Hopkins, Prairie Village senior, and "Footprints in the Snow," by Michael Brandt, who graduated last year. "Coverage," followed by "Footprints in the Snow," will be presented at 8tonight through Sunday in the Inge Theatre at Murphy Hall. Lance Gharavi, Merriam graduate student and director of "Coverage," said his production was much differ- than the alternative theater's version. In "Coverage," the main character, Porter, a former network news correspondent, is tormented by the memory of his son's drowning and the subsequent media exploitation of the death. The torment becomes worse when his former wife, Nancy, and coworker, Ray, try to persuade him to return to the network. "I have, in my direction of the play, radically altered the production," Gharavi said of his multi-media production that used prerecorded and live, closed-circuit video footage. "You might say I've deconstructed it." Gharavi said one difference between his production and the staged reading was that he was producing the entire play as though it took place in Porter's mind. "It very much resembles a dream," he said. "Or a more appropriate term would be a nightmare." The second of the two plays, "Footprints in the Snow," directed by Robert Weinstein, West Bloomfield, Robert Weinstein, West Bloomfield, Mich, senior, is less serious, Lim said. Lim said its characters included Dorothy and Toto from the "Wizard of Oz," a bull and an amorous cicada. The play is about a college actor who loses his identity playing Hamlet in a university production while trying to forget his girlfriend's suicide. "As asd it is sounds, it's a comedy." Lim said. "It's a very funny play." Weinstein said that the play also had a television game show host and the inventors of the jack-in-the-box. These characters are in his head and they sort of help him through his problems," he said. "It's not real strange. It's different. It's enjoyable." Tickets at Murphy Hall box office are $3 for students, $5 for senior citizens and $6 for the public. SUNFLOWER 804 MASSACHUSETTS 4 MASSACHUSETTS 843-5000 Eureka! 4'2" Eureka! Equinox 3 8 lbs.14 oz. "QUICK CLIPS" FOR FAST ASSEMBLY Eureka! SPACIOUS INTERIOR VOLUME The more the merrier. Who knows more eligible people than you do? Jaytalk does! Spending time alone is great, but something can be said for fun in numbers. So join in the good times. Don't be left out in the cold. Call 864-4358.