8 Thursday, February 3, 1994 Rentco USA 749-1605 Student Discount Now Carrying Computers 1741 Massachusetts Kennedy Glass For All Your Glass Needs All automotive glass replacement & insurance claims handled. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205 JD's Baseball Cards & Sports Nostalgia Shop 711 W.23rd 842-1002 We buy back used baseball cards 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch and Dinner Great Food KALIFORNIA (R) (4:30) 7:15, 9:35 Last Day THE PIANO (R) (4:15) 7:00, 9:30 Ends Soon SEXAND NEC (NC-17) Ft & Sat @ Midnight Blink R a'25; 7:10,9:40 Grumpy Old Men Pg 14-14:20; 7:20,9:50 Iron Will Pg 43:00; 7:00,9:35 Shadowlands Pg 70:00; 7:00,9:45 Beethoven's 2nd Pg 41:55; 7:15,9:35 Sister Act Pg 41:55; 7:10,9:45 3 Primetime Show (1) Hearing Dalby Serenity, Giligan Aimee 1 Imagine Silversea Crown Cinema BEFORE & PM. ADULTS $1.00 (LIVED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1079 MASSASUETTS 841-5191 Pelican Brief PG-13 5:00.8:00 Mrs. Doubtfire PG-13 4.45, 7.15, 9.40 Intersection R 5.00, 7.30, 9.40 Air Up There PG 7.30, 9.35 Tombstone R 4.50, 7.15, 9.45 Philadelphia PG-13 4.40, 7.20, 9.50 CINEMA TWIN: U1700 WA4 5L5181 $1.25 Jurassic Park PG-13 5.00, 7.28, 9.45 Good Son R 5.00, 7.30, 9.45 SHORTTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY MENACE II SOCIETY TUES. & THURS. 7:00PM TUES. & WED. 9:30PM INCIDENT AT OGLALA WED. 7:00PM THURS. 9:30PM POETIC JUSTICE FRI. & SAT. 7:00 & 9:30PM ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD. CALL 864-3-BOW FORE MORE INFO FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORES Lambda Sigma & Owl Honor Societies are now accepting applications. Applications are available at: *400 Kansas Union *Nunemaker Center Applications due March 4th KANSAS CITY TO LAWRENCE. TOLL FREE. With PageNet Nationwide, anyone in the U.S. can reach you toll free, no matter where your busy schedule takes you. Hometown friends and family, as well as fellow students, will always be able to contact you on your numeric pager, to tell of important news or make weekend plans. Just what today's college student needs. SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Call PageNet today to find out just how simple, inexpensive, and useful PageNet Nationwide can be for you. Call and ask about the KU student special! 1 (800) 710-1342 Kerrigan earns clearing; Harding may face hearing The Associated Press DENNIS, Mass. — A panel of figure skatingjudges yesterday pronounced Nancy Kerrigan physically and mentally fit for the Olympics, despite an attack in January that knocked her out of the national championships. Although Kerrigan could not skate at the championships in Detroit after the Jan. 6 attack in which her right leg was smashed with a collapsible baton, she was named with Harding to the U.S. Olympic team anyway — contingent upon yesterday's evaluation of her skating. "If there were any doubt or any questions about Nancy Kerrigan's skating condition, she answered them for us this afternoon," said Chuck Foster, secretary to the U.S. Olympic Committee and one of the four judges who watched Kerrigan perform at her practice rink. "We expect that she is going to do very well in Norway." In Portland, Ore., Jeff Gilooly, the ex-husband of skating champion Tonya Harding, met with investigators yesterday at the FBI office one day after he pleaded guilty to racketeering in the attack on Kerrigan. Under the plea bargain, Gillooly will be exempt from further charges in exchange for serving two years in prison, paying a $100,000 fine and giving further testimony in the case. A special committee of the U.S. Figure Skating Association began meeting Tuesday in Colorado Springs, Colo., to decide whether Harding must face a disciplinary hearing for violating the group's code of ethics. The finding would be a first step toward possibly removing Harding from the Olympic team. Committee chair Bill Hybl, the former president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, said the panel should have a recommendation on Harding by the end of the week. Her possible replacement, Michelle Kwan of Torrance, Calif., was given permission yesterday to go to Norway to be ready to compete in the Olympics, the U.S. Figure Skating Association announced in Colorado Springs. Harding hype helps speed skaters The Associated Press LILLEHAMMER, Norway — The first American athletes to arrive for the Winter Olympics said they could benefit from the courtroom drama swirling around teammates Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan. Fifteen athletes and three staff members of the men's and women's speed-skating team, the first part of a 276-member U.S. delegation to the Winter Games, arrived in Oslo yesterday. They said the attention on the rival figure skaters would lessen the pressure on even the best-known members of their crew. "I think it's the best thing that can happen to Bonnie (Blair) and Dan (Jansen)," said Nathaniel Mills, a 1,500-meter racer from Evanston, Ill. "Everything's Tonya and Nancy, and it will probably stay that way." Normally, Blair and Jansen would have been expected to be the focus of Olympic attention. If Blair sweeps the 500 and 1,000, as she did in Albertville, France, two years ago, she would have five gold medals, the most of any U.S. woman in Olympic history. That would be one more than swimmer Janet Evans, diver Pat McCormick and spinner Evelyn Ashford. became a worldwide event in 1988 when he slipped and fell in both the 500 and 1,000, trying desperately to win a gold medal in memory of his sister, who died just before his first race. Jansen is in his fourth Winter Games and still is searching for his first gold medal, the one championship in speed skating to elude him. His quest Peter Mueller, the team's coach, sent Jansen to Norway a day early to try to gain an edge in preparations for the 500, held Feb. 14, the third day of the Winter Games. He agreed that the focus on the Harding-Kerrigan saga could help his stars concentrate on skating. Mills said opinions among the speed skaters on whether Harding, who has been linked to the plot by former husband Jeff Gillooily, should remain on the Olympic team "are as varied as in the public at large." 749-2999 6th & Kasold MEET Discuss his positions on: Bob Eye, Independent Candidate for Governor of Kansas, in front of the Union today. Noon to 1:00 p.m. 1) Moving to renewable energy; 2) Providing universal health care; 3) Eliminating crime's root causes; 4) Eliminating the property tax. 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