6 Wednesday, March 30, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BARAKA(R)(5:45),7:30,9:30 SIX GREEDES OF SEPARATION(R) (4:30), 6:45, 9:15 Dickinson Cinema 6 2195 West 38th Street Major League 2 **P**6/4:20*, 7:15, 9:35 The Paper **R**4:35*, 7:05, 9:45 Mighty Ducks **B**2/14:5%, 7:00, 9:30 Naked Gun 33½**P**13/4:30*, 7:30, 9:40 Guarding Tess **P**4/4:25*, 7:10, 9:50 Schindler's List **R**4:00*, 8:00 3 PrimeTime Show (1) Heeding Dollar Senior Citizen Availability Impressed Star Crown Cinema BEFORE & P.M. ADULTS $3.00 (limited to SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1075 MASSACHUSETTS 847-5191 Jimmy Hollywood $ ^{R} $ 8:00, 7:15, 9:30 HILLCREST 825 JOWA The Piano $R$ 5.00 9.35, 8.45 Philadelphia PG-13 5.00 9.25, 8.45 China Moon $R$ 7.15, 9.30 The Ref $R$ 5.15 7.35, 9.30 Thumbelina $G$ 5.15, 7.15 Above the Rim $R$ 9.45 CINEMA TWIN 3110 IOWA 641 5191 $1.25 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4.50, 7.15, 9.45 Beethoven's 2nd PG 5.00, 7.15, 9.15 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Scorched, a new WANTED: ALTERNATIVE WRITERS Scorched, a new company dedicated to preserving and sharing your stories with literary integrity, is collecting gay and lesbian love stories from the Heartland. Send your vignette to: We will be publishing a men's and a women's volume of stories. Send your vignette to: SCORCHED ALTERNATIVE WRITERS GROUP Bragging and sentimentalism are encouraged. Please help us launch this exciting new enterprise. Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Submission is anonymous, story length not to exceed 750 words. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity. All submissions become the property of Scorched. P. O.Box 36262 Kansas City MO 64111 Pancho's MEXICAN RESTAURANT Homestyle Mexican Food 23rd & Louisiana 843-4044 Enlargements Up To 12"X18" In Only 3 Hours!!! 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 GIST '94 McDANIEL STUDENT PRESIDENT INDEPENDENT FOR A CHANGE PAID FOR BY GIST - McDANIEL HAPPY ABOUT THE CLASSES AT KU? The Greeks are. WEDNESDAYS ONLY 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA PYRAMID PIZZA PYRAMID "We Pile In Our" Buy a large get a 2nd of equal value for 3$ Buy a medium get a 2nd of equal value for 2$ Buy a small get a 2nd of equal value for 1$ Kansan Card offer available on carry out only JCCC Johnson County Community College Johnson County Community College Paralegal careers Johnson County Community College's paralegal program, which was started in 1977, is ABA-approved. If you have a bachelor's degree and think you might be interested in a career as a legal assistant, call for us more information about JCCC's Quick Start program. This accelerated program of study begins in the summer, when you can earn 14 credit hours in an eight-week session. The remaining 19 credit hours can be taken in subsequent semesters at your convenience. Call us today at 469-8500, ext.3184, for Quick Start information. We'll have you up and running in your career as a paralegal in no time! 12345 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas 66210-1299 (913) 469-8500 FOURTH ANNUAL POWWOW Native American Student Association University of Kansas Kansas Union Ballroom Saturday, April 2, 1994 Hours 2pm-12am STUDENT SENATE "Entertainment is a good venue, but we don't want it to overpower down town," Moody said. Bob Schulte, city commissioner said special consideration should be given for places without food sales but with revenue from sales other than alcohol. at 60 percent. He said the ordinance would prevent bars from taking over the downtown area. "We should have a mechanism that will allow for certain types of activi ties," he said. Schutte said that the intention of the commission was to limit the number of places that serve alcohol. Bar food sale requirement reduced "We don't want to create something with a loophole," he said. "We could get some strange combinations of bars disguised as something else." The commission plans to vote on the proposal Tuesday. Last night, the Lawrence City Commission lowered the percentage of required food sales in its proposal to limit the growth of bars in the Massachusetts Street area. The commission had established a 70 percent food-sales requirement at the beginning of March. But after research, it found that the requirement might be too high and cut it to 55 percent. By Heather Moore Kansan staff writer Even though the number of bars allowed in the downtown area might be limited, bars might find the new requirements for food sales easier to swallow. Mayor John Nalbandian said the Lawrence/Douglas County Planning Commission had surveyed area businesses to determine how the ordinance would affect them. The staff found that Teller's, 746 Massachusetts St., receives 60 percent of its sales from food, Rudy's Pizzeria, 704 Massachusetts St., receives 97 percent and Free State Brewing Co. Inc., 636 Massachusetts St., receives 65 percent he said. To receive a liquor license to operate a bar, an owner must establish that 55 percent of the business' revenues come from food sales. This ordinance would not affect bars currently in operation, but it would affect bars that might be established. Nalbandian said the ordinance would not count cover charges as nonliquor sales. Bob Moody, city commissioner, said the previous 70 percent requirement might have been too high and suggested that the commission set it THE NEWS in brief JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Violence may prompt South Africa to send troops to Zulu province Tensions showed no sign of subsiding a day after 53 people died in fierce clashes in and around Johannesburg triggered by a Zulu march protesting South Africa's first all-race election. The government and the ANC laid the groundwork yesterday for sending troops to the volatile Zulu-dominated Natal province if a peace summit fails to quell political violence. In Pretoria, the Transitional Executive Council ordered the drafting of regulations needed to declare a state of emergency in Natal province, which also includes the autonomous KwaZulu homeland led by Buthelezi. Unidentified gunmen fired at the African National Congress headquarters, where ANC security guards killed nine Zulu protesters Monday. No one was injured in yesterday's shootout, but the clash underscored the volatile situation before the April 26-28 election, which is expected to bring the ANC to power. Such a move would severely undercut Zulu leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi, who has vowed to oppose elections next month as a threat to Zulu sovereignty and autonomy. The proposed summit would address the escalating political violence as well as demands by Zulu nationalists for an autonomous state after the election. The council, a multiracial governing body led by the ANC and government, said security forces needed special powers to ensure safe and fair voting in Natal and KwaZulu. Such powers could include a state of emergency and the sending of troops to Natal, which is home to about 6.5 million people. The council already has taken over two homelands whose leaders opposed the election. "A lot of useful work has been done," said Russia's special envoy on Yugoslavia, Vitaly Churkin. "Our colleagues have been double-checking the maps and the positions of the two sides. Last week's round was very useful for us. We recharged the talks." ZAGREB, Croatia ZAGREB, Croatia Croats approach cease-fire Croatian officials and leaders of the country's rebel Serb minority moved closer to agreement on a cease-fire that could put a formal end to their 1991 war, a U.S. official said yesterday. Such an agreement is considered vital to ending the 23-month war in neighboring Bosnia-Herzegovina, which also broke away from Yugoslavia. Galbraith said earlier that discussion of those issues had been difficult because the two sides were "trying to settle lines in fairly obscure places." "I think things are going well," U.S. Ambassador Peter Gabraith said after more than nine hours of talks. Galbraith said there had been "sufficient progress" that a cease-fire agreement might be able to be signed late yesterday. Compiled from The Associated Press. NOW PLAYING