6 Wednesday, April 6, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- State Radiator Student Friendly We recycle anti-freeze, freon, and metals. 842-3333 613 N. 2nd North Lawrence radiators•heaters a.c•water pumps VISA BECOME A STUDENT MARKETING MANAGER Outgoing, goal-oriented student needed for marketing position. Learn management skills and marketing strategies while implementing on-campus promotions. ★ All work on campus ★ Excellent pay Flexible hours ★ For the 1994-95 school year ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEW Wednesday, April 13, 1994 Sign up in the University Placement Center Expense paid training conference HARBOUR LIGHTS Monday $1.00 Draws and $1.25 Premium Draws Tuesday $2.50 Premium Jam Jars Wednesday $1.50 Wells LIVE MUSIC ALL NIGHT Thursday $1.50 Jam Jars Friday $1.50 Miller Highlife Bottles Saturday $2.95 Big Import Bottles Sunday $1.75 Margarites and Bloody Marys now offering 8 beers on draft 1031 Massachusetts VOTE Save 15-25% on all Guys and Gals shorts •Levi·Pepe·Guess·Z-Cavaricci Columbia·Woolrich Selection of s/s shirts 25% off Spring merchandise arriving daily: T-Shirts·Caps·Belts Sunglasses·Ties 970A 970A 970A 970A 970A VOTE! VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE "Voting is one of our great rights... Let's not pass it up!" Roy Williams Head Basketball Coach University of Kansas Student Senate Elections April 13 & 14, 1994 Burge Union Kaneae Union Robinson Watson Library (Strong Hall) Wescoe Beach You must pick up your Spring 1994 Fee Sticker by April 12 in order to vote. Bring your KUID with Spring 94 fee sticker to one of the polls listed above on April 13 and 14 from 8:00 am - 4:30 pm (Kansas and Burge Union polls open until 7:00 pm on Wednesday, April 13). VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE Earn University of Kansas credit this summer through Independent Study. Enroll Today! Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, just north of the Student Union for a catalog of call 864-4440 for information. HIGH FAT & LOW FIBER STUDENT SENATE NEEDS AN For years large coalitions and the Greeks have run Student Senate, and every year students fail to have their views represented IT'S TIME TO CHANGE THAT. ENEMA! GIST 94 McDANIEL STUDENT PRESIDENT INDEPENDENTS FOR A CHANGE GIST 94 PWD FOR BY GIST-MOANIEL Douglas County judgeship within grasp of KU alumni By David Wilson Kansan staff writer Three local attorneys — two of whom are KU alumni — are the finalists in a race to become district judge for Douglas County. The three attorneys, David Berkowitz and Paula Martin, both of Lawrence, and Jack Murphy of Baldwin, were selected over 13 other contenders March 28. for people who had experience to seek judgeships when the opportunity arose. David Berkowitz received a degree from the KU School of Law in 1968. From 1972 to 1977, he was the county attorney for Douglas County. He now has a private practice in Lawrence. The names of the three finalists were sent to Gov. Joan Finney on March 29. Finney has 30 days from the time she got the list to pick one attorney for the judgeship, which represents the second division of the 7th District. Berkowitz said that it was important "In some ways, it's my duty," he said. Jack Murphy was a county judge in Morgan County, Colo., before coming to the area. He has a private practice in Baldwin and Eudora. Murphy graduated from KU with bachelor degrees in history and English. He is also a graduate of the University of Arkansas law school. "I enjoyed my experience in Colorado when I was on the bench," he said. Paula Martin has been the president of the Board of Legal Aid at the KU School of Law since 1984. She graduated from the school in 1981 and has been a supervising attorney with the board since her graduation. Martin said she had sought the judgeship because of her sense of social responsibility. "To me, it offers a good opportunity A panel of three attorneys and three nonattorneys interviewed the 16 prospective judges. The nonattorneys on the nominating panel are chosen by the Douglas County Board of Commissioners. The attorney members are elected by the Douglas County Bar Association. The panel members are volunteers, and their terms last five years. to have something intellectually stimulating and still be of service to others," she said. Ron Keefoever, information officer for the Office of Judicial Information, said that in 1996, voters would decide whether to keep the new district judge. Douglas County is one of 31 judicial districts in Kansas and has four divisions, each with its own judge. The judges hear both criminal and civil cases. Planet has no spare, speaker says The current district judge, James Paddock, will resign May 17. By Ashley Schultz Korean staff writer Kansan staff writer Recycling will not save the planet, said Twyla Dell, president of the Foresight Institute, an Overland Park environmental organization. The determining factor in the survival of the planet's resources lies in humanity's decision whether to be a dominator or a citizen in a natural community. "There is no spare planet to jump off to when we wreck this one," she said. Dell addressed about a dozen members of the Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals last night at the Burge Union. nere is no away, "Dell said. "You can't move away, and you can't throw She said people needed to meld ecological and economic concerns. away anymore. And so you have to stand and face the enemy, and it is us, and we need to try to change that. We must give up being consumers." "It's almost virgin territory," she said. "We are in the 1990s. If we don't do that, you can see that we are going to go to global poverty. We will just—and have been for the last 10,000 years—peel the resources off this planet like the skin off of an orange. "You have to think economically. Every environmental issue is ultimately an economic issue. If you don't make it economic, it doesn't happen." Dell, a former employee of the Environmental Protection Agency, organized several Kansas City area high school groups and designed the Environmental Leadership Program, a course offered through the institute, which boasts about 700 alumni. Program graduates formed Eco-Kansas City, a drive to improve environmental action in the Kansas City area. Kristi Holdsworth, Cottonwood Falls senior and the group's president, said she appreciated Dell's enthusiasm. "She's not there to provide the information," she said. "She's there to motivate people to find their own information." The group has had a speaker the first. Tuesday of each month since it began in the fall semester. Holdsworth said. COSTARICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION ! Bienvenido a la Universidad de Kansas ! Welcomes Dr. Oscar Arias Sanchez Former President of the Republic of Costa Rica and Nobel Peace Prize Winner WED. & THURS., APRIL 6th & 7th 10 a.m.to 4p.m Kansas Union April 6 - Main Lobby, April 7-KU Bookstore, level 2