2 Monday, September 10, 1990/ University Daily Kansan Weather TODAY Sunny HI:93° LO:68° TODAY KEY Rain Snow Ice T-Storms Kansas Forecast Partly cloudy and continued hot across the state. A 30 percent chance for an afternoon thunderstorm in Northcentral and Northeast Kansas. Salina 90/64 KC Dodge 88/67 City 94/66 Wichita 95/67 Forecast by Mike Petronico Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. 5-day Forecast Monday - Partly cloudy with a 10 percent chance for storms. High 13, Low 68. Tuesday - Mostly sunny and continued unseasonably warm. High 94, Low 70. KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300 Wednesday - Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance for thunderstorms. High 92, Low 70. Thursday - Partly cloudy with a 75 percent chance for storms. High 96, Low 69. Friday - Clear with a return to seasonable temperatures. High 78 Low 57 The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Strauffer-Fint Hall, Law, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence. Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Srauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan 60645 TIN PAN ALLEY Have YOU Eaten At The Castle Tea Room Lately? For Reservations Call: 843-1151 Have "You" Had Your Frozen Yogurt Today?? Dickinson 23rd & IOWA 841-8600 $300 PRIME-TIMER SHOW * SEN CITIZENS ANYTIME My Blue Heaven (PG-13) 4:20-6:03, 7:20-9:03, 9:20-11:03 TWOLOCATIONS: 23rd and Louisiana 15th and Kasold The Exorcist III (R) 4:35-6:25, 7:05-8:55, 9:30-11:20 Taking Care of Business (R) 4:30 6:20 7:15 9:05 9:25 11:15 Air America (R) 4:25-6:25. 7:00-9:00. 9:40-11:40 Witches (PG) 4:45-6:25, 7:25-9:05, 9:35-11:15 Pump Up The Volume (R) 4:40-6:30, 7:10-9:00, 9:40-11:30 AUTO Complete Detail Clean Expert Waxing 415 N. 2nd St. (913) 749-5671 LAWRENCE CLEANING Located Next to Johnny S The rear tire of a vehicle was punctured with an ice pick Wednesday afternoon in the 400 block of North Street, Lawrence police reported. AXΩ AΔΠ AΓΔ AOΠ XΩ Your Sorority Headquarters Shirts swine while you wait! 749-4565 811 Mass. KKΓ ΣΛT ΣK ΠBΦ ΓΦB 300 Strong Hall Workshop MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 A bicycle valued at $60 wa- remed between 3:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. Wednesday from a front lawn in the Lawrence Street, Lawrence police reported. ARREST ALGEBRA ANXIETIES For Training for Success with Math 003 and 101 7-9 p.m. Free Workshop presented by the Student Assistance Center Strategies for Success In Math 002 and 101 NON-CREDIT AEROBICS 4:30 Mon. thru Thurs. classes begin Sept. 10 only $25 a semester High Impact A composite value valued at $1,000 was removed between 1:40 a.m. and 2:10 m. Thursday from a security house located on the Hill Road Lawrence police reported. Police report 5:30 Mon. thru Thurs. classes begin Sept. 10. Only $25 a semester A KUID valued at $40 was taken Aug. 28 from 15th Street and Crestline Avenue, Lawrence police reported. Two male KU students were assaulted at 1:50 a.m. Friday in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police reported. An arrow was shot at 2 a.m. Friday through the lower window of a fraternity house in the 1500 block of Street. Law enforcement police reported A car struck a tree at 2:15 a.m. Friday at Ninth Street and Emery Road. The driver was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for a leg injury and released. Lawrence police reported Aquacise Hayden names head of new commission A bicycle valued at $450 was removed Thursday from the backyard of a residence in the 800 block of the street. Lawrence police reported Gov. Mike Hayden last week appointed his former opponent in August's Republican primary election as chairperson of a new state commission that will study education reform. Sunrise Aerobics Low Impact A 16-year old girl was arrested at 5:00 p.m. Thursday and charged with aggravated battery and child abuse of her 6-week-old child, Lawrence police reported. The girl was taken to Shawnee County Juvenile Detention Center. The child was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and is recovering from injuries not believed to be life threatening. Richard Peckham, who lost to Hayden in the Aug 7 primary, said that he hoped the committee would support education in the state. 6:15 - 7:15 MWF only $20 A KU student was harassed by a phone at 11 p.m. Thursday at her residence in the 1300 block of West Lewis Street. Lawrence police reported. A composite valued at $1,390 was removed at 12 a.m. m. Thursday from a sorority house in the 1600 block of Lawrence police report 5:30 Mon. thru Thurs. classas begin Sept. 1 only $25 a semester call 864 3546 "Hopefully, we can come up with a solid report for the government to look at and for the Legislature something with it." Peckham said. Robert Creighton, chairperson of the Kansas Board of Regents and commission member, said he would support a proposed constitutional amendment on November's ballot instigated Hayden's creation of the Governor's Commission on Reform of Educational Govern- Briefs The proposed amendment, which originated during the 1990 session, would give the Legislature the power to place the State Board of Education, the governing board for kindergarten through 12th grade, under its authority, Creighton said. Creighton said the amendment was too broad because it also would allow the Legislature to override its acts, the collegiate governing board. Under the Kansas constitution, the board is self-regulated. Under the Kansas constitution, the Legislature must provide for a Board of Regents, but the proposed amendment does not state this, he said. Creighton said that even though Hayden did not support the proposed amendment, the governor and commissioned to education reform Peckham said the commission would be creating a new amendment proposal for the 1991 session that would put the State Board of Education under legislative control while maintaining the Regents. Minority fellows meet with faculty at social Minority graduate fellows and members of the faculty and administration attended a social Friday, which gave them the chance to meet under friendly circumstances, said Robert Sanders, associate dean of the graduate school. Sanders said that this was the first year a gathering of this scale had been planned and that that would continue in the future. The Office of Minority Affairs and the Minority Graduate Recruitment Affairs division of the Graduate School sponsored the social, which was at Adams Alumni Center. Sylvia Suarez, assistant to the dean of the graduate school, said it was important for the groups to be outside of an academic setting. "We're hoping to establish a network and a familiarity between all of the groups," Sauree said. Craft, food and tunes fill annual art festival Sunny skies and the soft sound of big band music filled South Park yesterday at the 11th annual Fall Arts and Crafts Festival. The festival crafts featured cloth dolls, wooden toys, pottery, hand-spun yarn and hand-made jewelry. More than 200 exhibitors and concessions operators from Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Illinois filled the park, near 12th and Massachusetts streets Kathy Fode, superintendent of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, said about 8,000 people attended the event each year. are designed with students in mind, a housing official said. The city spends about $1,000 a year for the festival, depending on the cost of the entertainment. Fode there is no admission charge. Annie Dietz, Lawrence freshman, said this was her first year at the festival. Her booth featured hand-made jewelry. This year's bands included the Billy Spears Country Swing Band, The Stringers, The Jazzahs Big Band and the River City Six Band. Shawn George of Lawrence said this was his fourth year at the festival. He operated a lemonade stand Cindy Bachofer, academic pro- gramming coordinator at Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, said there would be six components for programming activities this year. Bachiofer said monthly hall programming and resident assistant programming would have an intellectual emphasis. Social activities will be available to students, but also included in plans are emotional, occupational, spiritual and physical components. met in residence halls Bachofer said that since younger undergraduates, mainly freshmen, lived in residence halls, activities would center on first experiences at college rather than career awareness. Varied student needs Becky Waters, programming director at HashingH Hall, said her job differed slightly from other programming directors. Hashinger's regularly scheduled events, including art shows and monthly open mic nights, enable students to perform. Waters said. The needs of Hashinger residents focus on fine arts, and included in her job description are the duties of choir director, play producer, and overseer of the hall's arts council, she said. Jennifer Schuh, academic programming coordinator at McColum Hall, said she hopes to bring U.S. and international students together within the next month to examine such as a student host program which would pair U.S. students with international students From Kansan staff reports UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY Party Pics Party Pics Party Pics Party Pics handmade Jewelry GOLDMAKERS 723 mass.842-2770 Beau's Import Auto Service Complete Maintenance & Repairs on Japanese Swedish - Japanese • Swedish German 545 Minn. Located East of the Yacht Club VKK4 Question: What is at the corner of Ninth and Indiana, feeds hundreds, tastes great, is a Lawrence tradition and doesn't cost much? (don't peek!) Answer: Need Help? Sign up for tutoring at Supportive Educational Services 108 SES Building 864-3971 LET SES HELP!! RAQUETBALL $90 per semester SPECIAL STUDENT MEMBERSHIP AEROBICS HEALTH EQUIPMENT 2500 W. 6TH 841-7230 Tuesday, September 11 7:45 p.m. Daisy Hall Room, Burge Union Featuring speakers from KU Law School KU Pre-Law Society FIRST MEETING For more information, call Vance at 843-3806 or John at 749-1785 ARE YOU PLANNING TO ATTEND THE ENGINEERING BUSINESS CAREER FAIRS ON SEPTEMBER18-19 ??? GET THE MOST OUT OF THE FAIRS BY ATTENDING THE FOLLOWING WORKSHOPS AT THE UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT CENTER UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT CENTER "WHAT CAN I DO WITH THE REST OF MY LIFE?" (Begin the Learning Plan on the Career Fairs) September 10, 2015 - 3:30 PM "BUT I'VE NEVER WRITTEN A RESUME BEFORE" ("Resume Writing For The Novice") "I'VE NEVER WRITTEN A RESUME BEFORE" ("Resume Writing For The Novice") "HOW CAN I IMPROVE MY RESUME?" (Memphis, Omaha) Wednesday, September 12, 2015 "COLLUGE YOU LOOK AT MY RESUME?" (Resume Review Sessions) (Time Remaining 5:00-15:00) These Programs To Be Presented At THE UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT CENTER At WESTERN MARYLAND HOSPITAL also... FOREIGN SERVICE CAREERS - THE FOREIGN SERVICE EXAM Thursday, September 13 1:00-3:00 Room a Fraser Hall 4:00-6:00 Room b Hall (Open To All Majors and Levels)