12 Wednesdav. August 29, 1990 / University Daily Kansan LAWRENCE TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL - **Self-Defense** - **Self-Confidence** - **Self-Discipline** - **Self-Fulfillment** - **Men and Women of all ages** Learn self-defense from an original master. Instructor: Master Ki-June Park, Ph D SPECIAL STUDENT RATES! Classes Monday through Sunday (Day and Evening). Meditation class - Sunday 10th & Massachusetts 843-2121 THEY'LL THINK YOU SPENT A FORTUNE (You'll know you saved one!) Top names in sportswear, separates, dresses and jeans. Everything you see in department stores but at 20-50% less. Shop around...you'll find your best values downtown..at Harper's Fashions. (Park FREE in our lot behind the store.) HARPER'S F A S H I O N S 835 Mass.-In Beautiful Downtown Lawrence-749-0626 K. U. Students Sports Tickets Distribution Please note: You may pick up YOUR Sports Ticket only. Where: East lobby Allen Field House Dates: See schedule below Time: 8:30-5:00 Bring: K.U.ID. with Fall 1990 Fee Sticker Spouse Ticket-Please bring proof of marriage SCHEDULE If your last name begins with the letter A-E Monday, Aug. 27th 8:30-5:00 F-K Tuesday, Aug. 28th 8:30-5:00 L-R Wednesday, Aug. 29th 8:30-5:00 S-Z Thursday, Aug. 30th 8:30-5:00 If you miss your assigned date you have from Aug. 31st until Oct. 1st to pick your ticket up at Allen Field House (Tickets are still available if you have not yet purchased them!) Clip & Save Clip & Save Fall crime rates increase By Christine Groody Since students started returning for the fall semester, local police have been busy handling the increase in crime and the jump in the Lawrence population. Kansan staff writer Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said there had been an increase in crime since students had returned. LJ. John Mullens of KU police said that KU also had seen an increase in crime but that it had not affected the number of officers that patrol the amps. "Younger students are probably more victimized than older students." he said. KU police statistics report that 18-year-olds are the most frequent victims of theft and burglary on campus. They accounted for 7.2 percent of the KU population in 1880 and 9.3 percent of the people victimized. "Not everybody has learned the ropes yet," Mullens said. "After midterms, people settle in and crime peaks out. After X-mas, people come back with a different attitude toward crime, learned the hard way." Mullens said. October and November are the months with the highest crime rate. Theft and burglary are the most common crimes on campus, but KU police have had twice as many reports of harassing telephone calls this year as they did last year, Mullens said. he said "Only 18 or 19 serious crimes were committed in 1989 on campus out of a total of 630 reported files," he said. A serious crime is a physical crime against a person, he said, such as rape or assault. Eighty percent of all the thefts and burglaries were open-door situations, Mullens said. "People walk in a dorm room or find a car unlocked and steal something out of it," he said. Kansas Bureau of Investigation statistics for the first six months of the year show 7.2 percent of thefts and 7.9 percent of thefts occurring on the KU campus are solved. "There are numerous cases of full-time residents working in the backyard, and someone comes in through the front door and steals a VCR," he said. Open-door crimes also are common off campus. Mulvenon said Because Lawrence has a small-town atmosphere, people often leave their windows and door open thinking it is safe, Mulvenon said. Preventive measures are the best way to avoid being victimized, he said. Students should leave lights or the television on when leaving for the evening. They also should lock their doors. When students go out of town, they should have a neighbor or friend check their apartments. If they live in a single- residence dwelling, the police will check the house occasionally and resident requests it, Mulvenon said. "There have been a couple of instances lately where young college women have been victimized, and it is totally appropriate for those individuals not to travel at night on foot," he said. Mullens said KU police tried to educate students on preventive crime measures. During summer orientation, students were given brochures and officers spoke with parents about crime prevention, he said. protect me he KU police also go to residence halls and snook about crime prevention and speak about crime prevention, Residence halls and Jayhawkower Towers are prime target areas for theves, Burglary and theft in cycles because a thief may work one or several area within the hall, Mulens said. Five murders upset Florida campus The Associated Press GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The bodies of a man and woman were found at a student apartment complex yesterday, a day after police said they believed the grisly deaths of three young women were linked. Law enforcement authorities said they didn't know whether the fourth and fifth deaths were related to the earlier slayings. "It looks like it's a part of a serial killer," state university system Chancellor Charles Reed said yesterday in Tallahassee. "It's a community problem. It's not just a university problem." There were no plans to cancel classes, but students were being encouraged to stay on campus, Reed said. "We think our campus is more active and has a larger community right now," he said. Alachua Sheriff's LT. Spencer Mann said the bodies of a man and woman were found together at about 8:30 a.m. at an apartment complex near one where two bodies were found Sunday. Police set up a command post between these sites and the spot about two miles from where a third body was discovered early Monday. Gov. Bob Martinez said the FBI and "out-of-state experts" were involved in the investigation. The Gainesville Sun quoted unidentified sources as saying that the woman had been decapitated and her breasts mutilated, while at least one of the other victims had her nipples cut off. Police would not confirm the reports but feared many killings were possible because of the gruseness of the slayings. "I don't think it takes a rocket scientist to figure out that anybody that commits homicide using mutation is a pretty sick individual, and it's somebody we want to get off the streets very badly," said Spencer Mann, spokesman for the Alachua County Sheriff's Office. Let it ring. It's not for you. Tired of answering the phone all the time-only to find most of the calls are for your lazy roommate? Southwestern Bell Telephone's new Personalized Ring $ ^{58} $ service can simplify your life. Personalized Ring gives you one or two additional phone numbers for the phone you already have in your dorm room, apartment or house. You could give a new number to your friends and family and then know, by the way the phone rings, that they're calling you. The phone will ring differently for your roommate's calls. At just $4 a month for one new phone number ($6 for two). Personalized Ring is the best bargain on campus. Probably less than you spend on pizza each week. Quit playing messenger for your roommate. Order Personalized Ring today at toll-free 1-800-325-2686, Ext. 713. Southwestern Bell Telephone The one to call on: