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How To Help A Friend Leave The Pack Behind Give up something you love for the day — chocolate, coffee, soda. Give a survival gift. Make an extra effort to phone or see your friend. Show support. Carrot and celery sticks; sugarless gum and candy; unbuttered popcorn; straws to sub for smokes, toothpaste Go where smoking is banned. Invite your friend to the gym, theatre, library, or a movie. Go out to dinner and sit in the non-smoking section, of course! Go out to dinner and sit in the non-smoking section, of course! Regular Clinic Hours: M-F Sam 4:30pm/Sat 6:11:90am Urgent Care (Additional Charge): M-F 4:30-10pm/Sat 11:30am-4:30pm/ Sun Sam 4:30pm We Care for KU PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bush, Clinton to discuss transition in Oval Office WASHINGTON — In time-honored tradition, George Bush and Bill Clinton will act as new-found friends today when the incoming president comes calling on the outgoing one. The Associated Press Rivals no more, the 41st president and the 42nd will talk one-to-one in the Oval Office, carrying out a ritual as old as the Republic. One surely will feel quiet pleasure, the other private pain. "It struck me how hard it is for a defeated president to suddenly see cameras facing in the other direction. Walter Mondale said yesterday. President watchers attach much significance to the first meeting in the Oval Office, which is as much a symbol of power as it is a workplace. The smoothness of the transition often is determined there. The official word out of the White House is that there is no fixed agenda — whatever President-elect Clinton wants to talk about. Before their first formal meeting, Dwight Eisenhower derided the incoming John F. Kennedy as a "young whippersnapper" — the 1960 version of Bush's reference to Clinton and Al Gore as "bozos." But afterward they walked arm in arm into the Cabinet room, and Eisenhower was described by a top aide as overwhelmed by Sen. Kennedy, his understanding of the world problems, the depth of his questions, his grasp of the issues and the keenness of his mind. But, Mondale said, "it all went over Reagan's head, and Carter really was shaken by it." Kennedy had a different view of their first meeting. His brother, Robert, said that Kennedy went out of his way to make sure that Eisenhower would not hurt the administration by going off at a tangent, not that Eisenhower ever gave him any advice that was very helpful. Ron Ziegler, then, 29, recalls arch-Republican Richard Nixon and arch-Democrat Lyndon Johnson deep in conversation about the Vietnam War and the social unrest and division convulsing the country in 1968 The outgoing Jimmy Carter had prepared meticulously for his first meeting with the president. whatever President-elect Clinton During the whole transition, the Nixon press secretary said yesterday, "there always was a 'connect' mutual respect, sort of understanding. George Bush's first post-election meeting with Ronald Reagan was no uneventful that Marlin Fitzwater doesn't even recall it. "You didn't have the impression of great upheaval as you have now," said Fitzwater. Clinton's adviser examines AIDS The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Bill Clinton pledged as a candidate that he would mount a battle against AIDS comparable to the Manhattan Project that developed the atomic bomb. But beyond saying he wants to increase research spending and end discrimination against AIDS victims, the only specific action the president-elect has said he would take is to increase the number of AIDS cases to oversee the federal government's efforts. One of his top health advisers, Joycelyn Elders, director of the Arkansas Department of Health, spent hours yesterday listening to suggestions on what the new administration should do in its first 100 days about the AIDS epidemic. Some of the advice given yesterday was quite detailed — how much money should be spent, how jobs in the administration should be structured, who should have them and who should answer to whom. Elders did not disagree with what was said in testimony before the National Commission on AIDS, but she did not put them down. The American Foundation for AIDS Research, for example, called for increasing spending on AIDS research to $1.8 billion, a $600 million increase over what the Bush administration has asked for. Krim said Clinton should restructure the Office of AIDS Research in the National Institutes of Health, replace Anthony Fauci, who heats it, and keep David Kessler as commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. Matilde Krim, chairperson of the foundation, called on Clinton to lift government bans on homosexuals in the military and on allowing people with the HIV virus into the country. Clinton has already said he supported both of those proposals but has not said when he would do it or how. Sitting just a few feet away, Elders listened to Krum's laundry店. The Arkansas health director, who says openly that she wants to be secretary of Health and Human Services, would say nothing about what advice she is giving Clinton about AIDS or what he might do. But Elders indicated the new administration would base its AIDS decisions on science, rather than politics or morality. "We certainly can make condoms available and accessible," she said, though she did not elaborate on exactly what that might entail. Despite the lack of specifics, some were encouraged by what they heard from Clinton and his people. "I think you will see the tide turning even at the local level," said Daniel Bross, executive director of the AIDS Action Council, who testified before the commission. Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students