6 Mondav. March 14, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NATURAL WAY 820-822 Mass St natural fiber clothing 841-0100 --- fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food 642 Mass. 749-1912 Theatre #1 is accessible to all persons IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER™ Today (4:30), 7:00, 9:45 Ends Soon! THE PIANO® (5:15), 8:00 Last Day! BARAKE OPENS THIS FRIDAY! Dickinson Cinema 6 2190 South Street, New York Guarding Teas **P0:**4:25; 7:00; 9:40 Reality Bites **P0:**14:30; 7:15; 9:50 Angle **R:**4:35; 7:10; 9:35 Schindler's List **R:**8:00; 8:00 Sugar Hill **R:**9:45 On Deadly Ground **R:**4:20; 7:00 Ace Ventura - Pet Detective **P0:**13:40; 7:20; 9:35 s 3 Primetime show (1) Meeting baby Skiing classes Away in Glendale, Arizona Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $3.00 (UNLIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Lightning Jack P0-13 5:15 7:30, 9:30 The Chase PG-13 5,15 Blue Chips PG-13 6,90 The Ref R 7,20; 8,45 The Ref R 7,20; 8,45 What's Eating 5,15 Gilbert Grape? PG-13 5,15 Greedy DTS PG-13 6,90 Greedy DTS 7,20; 8,45 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 UTWOOWN 413-5181 take Kaplan and get a higher score... Sister Act 2 PG 5.00, 7.30,9.45 The Fugitive PG-13 4.45,7.20 ...or take our refresher free!* KAPLAN The answer to the test question 842-5442 *If you use our full program. Restrictions apply. Score gains represent commitments, not averages. ...or take our refresher free!* Fast Free Delivery! SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY I.N. XX3682 Rev. A Printed in USA Sex, alcohol and suntan oil focus of bazaar at the Beach Safe Break Week targets KU revelers By Ashley Schultz Kansan staff writer In honor of Spring Break, condoms pencils, sunscreen, key chains, stickers, buttons and literature will be handed out at the beach today. Wesco Beach, that is. The Mini Health Bazaar in front of Wescoe Hall will kick off the fifth annual Safe Break Week, which is sponsored by various campus organizations. Alcohol, sex and tanning are among the topics Safe Break events will address, said Julie Francis, public health educator with Watkins Memorial Health Center and adviser for Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You. "We cover the whole gamut," she said. "For a week, we try to put out pointers and give away free samples of sunscreen and that type of thing." Students at the bazaar will be able to climb into the Kansas Highway Patrol's "Convincer," which simulates a five mph crash, and watch as a dummy demonstrates the advantages of wearing a safety belt when a truck rolls in the "Rollover Machine." A game based on craps at the bazaar was inspired by a speaker at a Safe Break organizational meeting. "I guess what the speaker was saying is that your chances of rolling snake eyes are very slim, but it's possible," Francis said. "So if you take your chances rolling snake eyes, and you lose everything, it's the same type of situation when you get in a car with a drunk driver." Renee Speicher, Hutchinson graduate student and coordinator for the Center for Sexual Health Education, helped put together a Sex Squares game for Wednesday night. Audience members-turned-contestants will compete with the help of nine University "celebrities" in a question-and-answer game patterned after "Hollywood Squares," Speicher said. The national Centers for Disease Control suggests that organizations select one week in March to promote AIDS awareness, Speicher said. In conjunction with Safe Break, Watkins has selected this week because of the increase in cases of sexually transmitted diseases that accompanies Spring Break. Those increases have been on the decline the past two years, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins. He attributes the decline to increased publicity surrounding Spring Break. About 800 people a month come into Watkins with problems related to sexual exposure and case numbers usual Safe Break Week Tomorrow — GAMMA's version of "Studs" — 7:30 p.m, at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union Today — Mini Health Bazaar — give-away items, information, safety belt demonstrations, free nonalcoholic beverages, "crap" game — from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in front of Wescoe Hall Wednesday — Sex Squares — 8 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union For more information, call 8649570. KANSAN lyjump to about 1,200 in April, he said. Watkins usually treats the same sexually transmitted diseases in April as in other months — with one exception. Yockey said. Charcroid, a sexually transmitted disease similar to syphilis and indigenous to South Texas, was usually seen only in April at Watkins, he said. "The problem with Spring Break is that people do things they don't normally do," Yockey said. "And they do them under the influence of alcohol." Union art show honors KU seniors Kansanstaffwriter Passers-by in the Kansas Union may catch a glimpse of larger-than-life pears or a fuzzy, pink-and-green motorcycle. Scott Wilson, Leawood senior, said the collection featured 15 pieces selected from about 30 works shown in the senior art and design exhibition last week. For the next three weeks, KU students' works will be catching the eyes of Union visitors. For the students, all of whom are art and design seniors, this is the last chance they will have to dislay their works before graduation. "The purpose of this is to show our work to the community and to the students and to have the experience of actually being in a show," Wilson said. Shana Pearlmutter, St. Louis senior, agreed with Wilson. She said many KU students might have missed the complete seniors' show because they either didn't know about it or were intimidated by going into the Art and Design Building itself. But, she said the show in the Union gallery would be a more comfortable atmosphere for everyone to share and enjoy the works. Both Pearlmutter and Wilson said the show should not be seen as a representation of the graduating seniors' work. But because the selection was based on the personal criteria of faculty judges, it was more like an actual showing, they said. "Distillation of Thought," a work by Jay Hendricks, Lake City, Iowa, senior, was selected for the show. Hendricks said the painting's title inspired viewers to interpret the meaning for themselves. Everyone will get something different out of it, he said. Hendricks said his personal message reflected his experiences throughout life and his reflective attitude about it. "Life should be much simpler than it is." he said. "It's almost like it took me a lifetime to do it," he said. Hendricks said that completing the work had taken him hours but that time couldn't compare to the amount of preparation he had needed for it. Although he was satisfied with being selected for this show, Hendricks said, he realized that he had more learning to do. "But it is graftifying to be recognized for my efforts and my vision," he said. Finally, something for college that just got less expensive. Macintosh LC 475 4/80, Apple Color Plus 14" Display, Apple Extended Keyboard II, PLUS the Apple StyleWriter II. Only $1,513.92 after $100 rebate! Right now, when you buy an already affordable Macintosh* LC 475 with an Apple* StyleWriter* II or LaserWriter*, you'll receive a $100 mail-in rebate from Apple*. That's a hundred bucks now on a computer with fast 040 performance. Plus the Macintosh LC 475 is upgradable to PowerPC* performance in the future, if you need it. But that's not all. You'll also take home seven popular software programs while supplies last. That's a complete Macintosh system with a lot of goodies, at a really unbeatable price. So, what are you waiting for? 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