12 Wednesday, March 2, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawk Bookstore "Yearbook Professionsalis" "Al's top in Neslath Hill" Nrs. 1-8 Md.-Th. 8-Fm. 1-4 Sq. 12-4 Gm. 944 Mass. 832-8228 Red Lyon Tavern Spring Break Budget Blues? We loan $$\$$ in exchange for your valuables! Guaranteed security while you're away! There is no easier way to get a quick, short-term loan with no credit check! Lawrence Pawn & Shooter Supply 718 New Hampshire 843-4344 THE NEWS in brief WASHINGTON Bosnian Muslims work for peace with Croats; Serbs to open airfield Bosnian Muslims and Croats agreed yesterday on the framework for establishment of a federation that could move Bosnia a significant step closer to peace. The agreement would bring together two of the three parties in a bloody two-year ethnic conflict that has cost the lives of more than 200,000 people. Signing of the agreement was planned at the State Department. Missing from the equation are the Bosnian Serbs who have gained military control of 70 percent of the former Yugoslav republic. However, in another promising step, Serb leader Radovan Karadzic announced in Moscow an agreement to open the airfield at Tuzla in Bosnia and said the first relief plane to the city would be Russian. The Serbs are under threat of NATO air strikes if they refuse to allow opening of the airport by Monday. The agreement in Washington was reached after four days of intensive negotiations by Muslim and Croatian leaders. Croatian Foreign Minister Mate Granic said earlier in the day that the talks were in their final stages. At the White House, Clinton bade farewell to British Prime Minister John Major, and the two leaders told a brief news conference that they planned to work together "for a resolution of the crisis" in Bosnia. The details were not immediately available. Major said the United States and Britain would send a "joint civil planning mission" to Sarajevo, presumably to help put the city back together now that "the cease-fire there is holding." The Etc. Shop TM 928 Mass. 843-0611 Palestinians scoffed at the gesture. The delegation will include seven or eight Americans and 10 to 12 British who are specialists in sanitation, disease control, public utilities and fuels. The group will go to Sarajevo early next week and spend up to four weeks there. Their recommendations will be presented to the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and other agencies that may finance reconstruction projects. $15 Today $30 This week EARN CASH ON THE SPOT By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME! HEBRON, Occupied West Bank Samir Ghosheh, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization's ruling Executive Committee, dismissed the release as "irrelevant to the real issue of providing protection for our people." He called it "cosmetic surgery" to dampen the violence that has swept the occupied territories and parts of Israel since Friday's massacre. NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750 Palestinians scored at the gesture. "I think the Israeliis are releasing us now to make the Palestinians happy," said freed prisoner Wael Salameh, 38, when he arrived in Hebron, where dozens of Muslim worshipers were slain by a Jewish settler Friday. "This is not a real step for peace." The PLO won't resume peace talks with Israel unless "certain guarantees are provided" to protect Palestinians living under occupation, he said. But, amid intense diplomatic maneuvering, there were signs that these now may be forthcoming. Israeli sources were optimistic that the suspended talks will resume after Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's offer of a package of concessions that go partway toward meeting PLO demands. Palestinian prisoners released Israel released more than 500 Palestinian prisoners yesterday to coax the PLO back to peace talks suspended after the Hebron mosque massacre and said another 500 would be freed by the weekend. Western and Arab diplomats in Tunis, Tunisia, the PLO's headquarters, said Israel's concessions, offered this week, include strengthening a Palestinian police force being deployed under the Sept. 13 PLO-Israeli peace accord. - CAMBRIDGE • WOOLRICH • BOULEVARD Compiled from The Associated Press. - HENRY GRETHEL • C.J. COTTON • CALVIN KLEIN • SEMINAR: "THE TRUTH ABOUT ACTING IN COMMERCIALS, TV,FILM,BROADWAY & MODELING" New York producer and leading independent talent scout Peter Sklar, who holds a Masters Degree in Education from Harvard, will conduct a seminar focusing on the involvement of young adults, teens and children in New York's professional entertainment world. The discussion will include a behind-the-scenes look at auditions for commercials, television, film, Broadway and modeling, the real definition of "marketability", the role of casting directors and agents, the truth about portfolios, modeling schools, pageants, talent and model searches, how to spot "ripoff's," important do's and don't's, and much more. Following a question-and-answer period, Mr. Sklar will conduct personal interviews with young people in the audience to briefly assess appearance, personality and overall "marketability" from a professional casting perspective. Specific advice and options will be offered to those young people who, in Mr. Sklar's opinion, can realistically be encouraged to pursue professional auditions locally and/or in New York. Dress should be casual, with absolutely no make-up or hairspray or excessive jewelry. Reservations are required. There is no charge for admission. Monday, March 7th 7:00 PM(prompt) JEANNE'SDANCE STUDIO 3923 South Noland Rd. Independence, MO RESERVATIONS: (816) 833-1515 Tuesday March 8th 6:30PM (PROMPT) Layton's academy of dance 5250 Blue Ridge Blvd. Raytown, MO Reservations: (816) 358-6694 WHEN & WHERE RESERVATIONS REQUIRED Wednesday, March 9th 6:30 pm (prompt) Steppin' out Arts academy 527 SE Melody Lane Lee's Summit, MO reservations: (816) 525-7464 Thursday, March 10th 6:30 PM (prompt) MTC Agency 4043 Broadway Kansas City, MO reservations: (816)531-3223 Saturday, March 12th 1:00 PM (prompt) Miss Dianna's school of dance 7640 N. Oak Trafficway Kansas City, MO Reservations: (816)436-9480 Friday, March 11th 7:00pm (prompt) White oak dance academy 1111 SW 28th St. Blue Springs, MO reservations: (816) 228-3200 Sunday, March 13th 3:00 PM(prompt) Dixie Bell Dance Center 12418 W62nd Terrace Shawnee, KS reservations: (913)631-2365 Monday, March 14th 2:30 and 6:30 PM (prompt) MTC Agency 3923 South Noland Rd. Independence,MO Reservations: (816)833-1515 Zachery Bryan ABC TV'S Home Improvements (Peter Sklar Protege) Who May Attend: Young adults ages 18-24 Children ages 5-17 and parents Peter Sklar holds a Masters Degree in Education from Harvard and is currently America's leading professional independent talent scout, directly responsible for the commercial, television, film. Broadway and modeling careers of thousands of young people from all parts of the United States. His work entails daily consultations with leading casting directors and talent representatives throughout the nation, and has been featured repeatedly in major articles in the New York Times, New York Daily News, in dozens of newspapers in major cities across the country, and on nationwide network news and entertainment programs including Donahue, Good Morning America, Midday Live, PM Magazine and many others. Proteges include Zachery Bryan (ABC TV's Home Improvements), Ricky Schroder (The Champ, CBS TV's Silver Spoons), Lori Loughlin (NBC TV's Full House), Allison Smith (Broadway's Annie, CBS TV's Kate & Allie), Brian Bloom (CBS TV's As the World Turns), J.D. Roth (Fox TV's Fun House), Missy Goldberg (ABCTV's SaturdayA.M.Posse), Carrie Shayne (ABCTV's General Hospital), Ashley Levitch (NBCTV's I/II FlyAway), Sarah Jessica Parker (Hocus Pocus, LA Story, Footloose), Alisan Porter (Curly Sue, Parenthood), Sarah Doroff (Three Fugitives) and many, many others. Mr. Sklar is producer and composer/lyricist of the Broadway musical The Kid Who Played the Palace. He is co-author of the professional trade publication "Winning Monologues From Beginnings" ("Baker's Plays/Samuel French"). 1