8 Monday, September 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan The Castle Tea Room 1307 843-1151 Massachusetts Over 70% of KU students read Kansan classifieds. 864-4358 Resume Copies - Fine Stationery - Matching Envelopes kinko's the copy center 843 - 8019 PRINT OFFICE 749 - 5322 PRINT OFFICE 841 - 6177 JUNE 19 TIME TO BUY A COPY Art show exhibits talent By Bryan Swan Kansan staff writer People flocked to South Park yesterday to enjoy the exhibits, sunshine, music and food, all part of the 10th Annual Fall Arts and Crafts Festival. The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department sponsored the festival, which featured 150 artists and craftsmens from 40 cities in Kansas as well as from Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and New Mexico. "This is a full-time job for us," said Gil Rosser, Silver City, N.M. "Literally, one day in June we quit our jobs and hurriedly started making things." This is a full-time job for us. Literally, one day in June we quit our jobs and hurriedly started making things.' Gil Rosser Silver City, N.M. Rosser and his wife, Leigh, worked a Western-style women's accessories tent at the festival and sold T-shirts, beaded neckchiefs and earrings made of ceramics, beads and acid-etched metals. "We've been to Long Island, Dallas and are heading to California for the winter season," he said. "We learned quickly that traveling around the city was going to be. We're going to try and stick to the Midwestern and Western states." Another merchant, Edith Siegel, Shawnee, said she had been working with ceramics for as long as she could remember. "It's fun to hear people walk by and say, 'Oh that's beautiful,'" she said. "I'll start with a form and experiment with it. Then the decoration follows. You make more complex forms as you get more experienced." Max Herbeler, Topea resident and silversmith, said his carved wooden crucifixes had a special meaning for him. Among the thousands of festival-goers was Barb Storkamp, a graduate student who moved to Lawrence from Minnesota last week. "These come from a 50-year-old walnut cut by my dad when he was a young man," he said. "My son just bought a wooden California Raisin and now I'm looking for something too," she said. "We heard about the festival and marked it on our calendar. I just started at KU's clinical psychology program, so we looked for something to decorate the bare white walls of our home." Storkamp had plenty of company. Kathy Fode, spokesman for the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, estimated that 4,000 people attended the festival in the first two hours. She said the crowd was expected to reach 8,000 by the end of the day. "It was questionable about the weather, but we couldn't have asked for a better day," Fade said. "Everyone was tired of being inside." The sunshine was particularly useful to Lym Granger, Overland Park. Granger works with stained glass to make decorations and kaleidoscopes. "They are really less complicated than they look," she said. Mrs. Robert Parks, Independence, Mo., also takes advantage of nature for her crafts. Every winter she travels to the Gulf of Mexico to collect seashells which she glues together to make owls, mirror frames and floral designs. "Sailors have been making shell valentines from the beginning of time," Parks said. "It is a noble art." No bones broken in accident Bus hits blind prof By a Kansan reporter Norberto Salinas, professor of mathematics, was hit by a KU on Wheels bus about 10:30 a.m. Friday on Jayhawk Boulevard in front of Strauffer-Flint Hall. Salinas, who is blind, was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where X-rays were taken to suffer no pain and did not suffer any broken bones. Debbie Green, Overland Park junior, said she saw the accident as she walked from Fraser Hall to Strong Hall. Green said she saw Salinas stepping out of the bus as she crossed the street. Susan Jones, Wichita sophomore, was a passenger on the bus and said Salinas was sitting at the back. She said she thought it was strange that he stood up to go out the back door before the bus had come to a complete ston. "He was trying to get off when he tripped and fell under the bus," she said. "His leg got caught." Jones said that Salinas pushed the back door open and stepped out. He tripped, and the bus rolled onto his leg before it stopped. Neither the driver, Steve Conley, nor the Lawrence Bus Company, which provides the KU on Wheels could be reached for comment. Norberto Salinas is helped from under the rear tires of a KU on Wheels bus. Andres Caveller/KANSAN Save big bucks. Clip Kansan Coupons WordPerfect Get the highest rated word processor at an unbelievable educational price-with speller and thesaurus! ☐ WordPerfect V.4.2-$125 ☐ WordPerfect V.5.0-$135 (Requires proof of F/T KU enrollment or employment.) Connecting Point. COMPUTER CENTER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Kenneth Spencer Memorial Lecture Series Presents Management Specialist DEMING Thursday, September 14, 1989 W. EDWARDS Kansas Union Ballroom 2:30 p.m. Admission by ticket only Students can pick up a ticket by showing their student ID at the EUA ticket offices in the Kansas union from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Sept. 1 and Tuesday, Sept. 12. Limit one per student. Let us pay for your Spring Break You get March rent free with the signing of a 10-12 month lease! *Crescent *Oaks *Gas Light *Acorn 1 Bedroom starting at $295 Call 842-4461 * 1815 W. 24th --- ATTENTION APPROXIMATELY 2000 NEW STUDENTS HAVE FAILED TO DOCUMENT THEIR IMMUNIZATIONS WITH WATKINS HEALTH CENTER. FAILURE TO DO SO WILL RESULT IN A HOLD PLACED ON THE STUDENT'S RECORD AND THEY WILL BE UNABLE TO ENROLL FOR THE SPRING SEMESTER. ALL NEW STUDENTS* ARE REQUIRED TO PROVIDE DOCUMENTATION OF THE MANDATORY IMMUNIZATIONS WITH STUDENT HEALTH BY SEPTEMBER 15,1989. MANDATORY IMMUNIZATIONS $\Rightarrow$ MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) -received after 12 months of age $\gg$ Tetanus-Diphtheria booster within last 10 years $ \Rightarrow $ Polio -basic series (usually completed prior to entry into elementary school) IMMUNIZATIONS ARE AVAILABLE AT WATKINS HEALTH CENTER ON A WALK-IN BASIS: MONDAY-FRIDAY, 8 A.M.-4:30 P.M. - Students born before 1958 are exempt.