6 Monday, March 8, 1993 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Enlargements Up To 12"X18" In Only 3 Hours!!! 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer EXPIRES 3/31/93 Discover Our Difference. Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa 841-6886 Stop Cloning Around! ZENITH data systems NAME BRAND QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE At Clone Prices 486DX/33's begin at $1,460.00 Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence,KS 843-3826 INCLUDING... ORIGINAL MOVIE MUSIC ART, AND NOVELTY POSTERS STAR STRUCK 9:00 A.M.- 5:00 P.M. MONDAY, MARCH 8 TO FRIDAY, MARCH 12 Irene Lanier / KANSAR Haskell Indian Junior College students Junior White Cloud, left, and Warren Anque play the drums for spectators during the Benefit Round Dance. The round dance, held Saturday at Haskell's Coffin Complex, was a daylong benefit carnival featuring American-Indian clothing, jewelry, food, dancing and carvings. Dance benefits community By James J. Reece Kansan staff writer A group of drummers sat playing a drum the size of a caldron. Men and women danced a circle around them. Some dancers wore American-Indian attire, while others wore ordinary street clothes. dav at Coffin Complex at Haskell. One man in a bell-adorned head-address shuffled around the drum and kept time with the load jingles that rang with each move. "Hove this music," said Daniel Reed Davis, a sophomore at Haskell Indian Junior College. "It almost hypnotize me." Money raised from raffles, cake walks and American-Indian food and crafts sales will go to the Lawrence Indian community, said dance organizer Mark Randolph, a Broken Arrow, Okla., senior at KU. The music was part of the festivities at the benefit Round Dance on Saturthe Kiowa Cultural Club and the Uni- ted National Indian Tribal Youth at Haskell and the Lawrence Indian Center. He said the money would help start programs that he and other organizers thought were lacking in the community. The planned programs would teach classes in such areas as parenting and American-Indian language, jewelry making and beadwork. Randolph said the total amount of money raised would not be known until today. The center's executive director, Charlene Johnson, did not take credit for the fund-raiser. Sponsors included the Native American Student Association at KU. "It was the students who spearheaded the whole thing," she said. "We just lent them our name." Randolph said a round dance was different from a powwow, a spiritual ceremony, in that it placed less emphasis on traditional dress. "The best way for me to explain it is it's like an Indian social," he said. "You get to see old friends, make new friends and raise some money." BRIEF George Will donates $500 to Kansas baseball team Kansan staff report Author and columnist George Will, who received the William Allen White Award Feb. 5 at the University of Kansas, has made a $500 donation to the KU baseball team. William Allen White Foundation's national citation for distinguished journalism during a luncheon program on campus. The award included a bronze medal and a $500 honorarium. "I learned after Mr. Will's visit that he wished to donate his honorarium to the baseball team," Kautsch said. Will is noted for his writings on government and politics and for his best-selling book"Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball." Will received the Kautsch said he arranged for the check to be presented on Will's behalf before the opening home game on Saturday. Will included an appearance by two uniformed KU baseball players, John Wuycheck, first baseman, and Jeff Niemeier, catcher. The players, who were accompanied by baseball coach Dave Bingham, asked Will a question and gave him a Jayhawk baseball can. "John, Jeff and I are all fans of George W. Will," Bingham said. "We enjoyed playing a part in the award program. The coaches and the players are pleasantly surprised and grateful." The Feb. 5 award program with THE MASTERCARD COLLEGE MUSIC TOUR Apply now for a Citibank MasterCard card and receive*: A MasterCard New Music CD featuring BLIND MELON CATHERINE WHEEL THE JUDYBATS KING MISSILE MATERIAL ISSUE LEMONHEADS *Offer available when you stop by the Citibank MasterCard table in the Bookstore on Monday, March 8th; Tuesday, March 9th and Wednesday, March 10th between 9+5 and fill out a Citibank MasterCard card application. ©1993 MasterCard International Incorporated