VOL. 100, NO.39 (USPS 650-640) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THURSDAY OCT. 19,1989 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS:864-4810 Disappearing act puzzles relatives Haskell joins search for student Bv JENNIFER METZ Kansan staff writer Last night, more than 100 faculty, staff and students from Haskell Indian Junior College continued the search for Cecil Dawes Jr., a former Haskell student and recently disenrolled KU student. The group searched the banks of the Kaw River, railroad tracks and surrounding neighborhoods near the Los Amigos Saloon, 508 Locust, where Dawes was last seen early Sunday morning. Dawes is a 21-year-old, 5" 11" male and weighs between 185 and 190 pounds. He has short black hair, brown eyes and has scars above his left eye and his right cheek, said Wylma Dawes, his mother. Dawes' friends said he was involved in a fight at Los Amigos Saloon shortly Decil Dawes. Lawrence. looks down the Kansas River.A search began for his son, Cecil Dawes Jr., yesterday evening Dawes when picked up a friend, LeeAnne Nelson, 20, Claremore, Okla., outside the bar and drove from the bar. Dawes' abandoned car was hit on train tracks at 225 N. Michigan St. nearly three hours later. Nelson said Dawes parked the car on the tracks, got out and told her to hide in the hubs. Dawes then disappeared. Wylma Dawes said she last saw her son Saturday afternoon at her home in Lawrence where Dawes came to work on his car. She said that he seemed upset about something, but she assumed that it was because Dawes was frustrated about his car. She said he was in a generally good mood when he left their home later that afternoon. "When he is upset, he doesn't stay upset for a long time," Wylma Dawes Stacey Gore/KANSA Tattoos Continued from p. 3 pattern or began drawing the chosen pattern. The drawing of the pattern begins with its outline, Prof. Inkslinger said. Next comes the shading of the design with grays and blacks, followed by the coloring. The tattoo is then bandaged for an hour and its owner is given an instrument and ointment to treat it once he or she returns home. "It's painless. You do not have to get drunk," said Prof. Inklinger, who won't tattoo inebriated people. "And it does not hurt like hell." Although most of those interviewed agreed it was painless, strong emotions remained about the end result. "I wanted to tell them this summer, but never did," she said. "My mom will have a strange reaction, but she saw others on the beach this summer and thought it was funny." For one, Walsh has not told her parents about her tattoo. Breckenridge said she wasn't bothered by her friends' mixed reactions to her Jay- hawk. Prof. Inkslinger said he has enjoyed working with his increasing college clientele because of the attitudes they have brought into his parlor. "Some have said, 'What is your husband going to think? What did your mom say?' " she said. "But it didn't cause me any problems. If criticism affected me, I would not have gotten a tattoo." "Students are intelligent, articulate and able to make a safe, safe decision." be said. Still, Prof. Inkslinger said there were times when he realized his work was not for everyone. Such as the time this summer when five KU students were getting some small work on their ankles. "One guy was giving his friends a terribly hard time every time they scrumd up their faces," he said. "But no one had any trouble but him." "When it was his turn, he was so scared, so petrified, he tried to run. But he got light-headed and passed out. "Females are much better clients because they don't squirm." ers will be distributed today ughout Lawrence to inform the munity about Dawes. s lesson e history his is just one event in Lawrence history that Steve Jansen recounted today afternoon in his speech, the History of Minorities in Law- ce." He is director of Watkins immunity Museum. he speech was part of the Weekly Icheon Series, which is sponsored University Forum and Ecumenical Christian Ministries. About 40 people ended the lecture at ECM, 1204ad Ave. folleen Ryan, a member of the foa, said the luncheon group was a See HISTORY, p. 6 blast-off to space years and astronomy, said, "Once it ads out of the inner solar system, all you have to worry about is if every will work after all these years in rage." he said that the spacecraft would l to man's knowledge of the giant net, Jupiter. be said the probe that Galileo will beipping into Jupiter's atmosphere will be meteorologists information on nospheric effects that they couldn't before. Meteorologists will learn a lot about itiner's atmospheric effects, which help them learn more general insights about meteorology," Cravensd. "It might help us learn more out our own patterns on Earth. We really don't know some basic if because we had to observe long tance, "Cravens said. Studying meteorology based on the nosphere of one planet is like study- psychology based on only one son." Kansan's regular typesetter fails About 1 p.m. yesterday, the Kanan's normal typesetting equipment rashed. The reasons for the crash were unknown, and the system was not running in time for the Kansan's regular deadlines last night. The School of Journalism provided several Macintosh computers to produce this issue. As of 2 a.m., today, it was not known if the system would be working in time for Friday's issue. 14A Wednesday, October 18, 1989 / University Daily Kansan 7