6 Tuesday, November 3, 1992 Ride the Bus Downtown on Saturdays! NATURAL WA KU On Wheels 801 Mass 801.000 Computer Users Computer Users Now you can access USA TODAY ONLINE, SBENYTES, Closing Stock Prices, Digital Music and Video Reviews. Over 100 M-AT M conferences via modem at a very low annual cost to satisfy your all-dos `Dos Windows needs` Call today for a free tour. DATA BANK BBS 913-842-7744 1200-9600 BPS (B-N-1) MONARCH NOTES ONLINE We Sell CD-Roms Consenting Adults R(5'20) 7:45 Blade Runner R(5'50) 7:45 Of Mice & Men PG13(5'25) 7:40 Night & City R(5'10) 7:25 Pure Country PG(5'15) 7:30 Mr. Baseball PG13(5'20) 7:45 53 Primetime Show (+) *Hearing* *Dolly* Senior Cute Anime! *Imagined* *Stereo* Alec Baldwin, Al Pacino, Jack Lemon, Ed Harris in GLENARGRY GLEN ROSS (Th. 2)('5.00), '7.00, 9.30 Daily Derek Jarman's EDWARD II (Th. 1) ('530), 9:00 Mon.-Thur. LIMER LIMITED ENGAGEMENT! INCIDENT at OGLALA (Th. 2) Hold over; Mon, Tues, 2-3 LGN; JI Crown Cinema ENJOY MOVIES ON THE BIG SCREEN WITH SUA! Seniors vote today forthe H. O.P.E.AWARD in Wescoe Kansas Union Learned A vote for Neva Entrikin is a vote for a citizen-legislator not a career politician. - We need Neva's high energy and tenacity working for us in Topeka. - We need Neva because she will work for term limitations. - We need Neva because she will work to keep legislators from raising their own pay. ENTERTAINMENT "I have visited with- and listened to residents in every precinct in the 46th District. I have heard their concerns. They have doubts about our current leaders. They say that we need a change." Neva Entrikin Adv. Paid for by Entrikin for 46th Bernie Norwood, Treasurer Vote for Change Vote for Neva Entrikin UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN declare marshal maw," she said. Continued from Page 5. When the news of marshal law spread, in order to protect the students, citizens set up barriers to prevent the troops from advancing into Beijing City that night. Shu said. "There were 200,000 students in the Square and at least a million people in the streets," she said. "One elderly woman laid down in front of the tanks to keep them from advancing. Others made barricades from public buses, some stacked bicycles upon each other to try and stop the tanks." But the tanks and the troops advanced, and on June 3, 1989, the crackdown began. Shortly after the military intervention, the Chinese government reported that there was no bloodshed at Tiananmen Square. Since then, the government has reported that some died, but nowhere near the 20,000 that some sources Continued from Page 5. estimate lost their lives during the massacre. Shu was one of the lucky ones because that night she had remained on campus to study. "Change will come to China, slowly, but it will come," she said. "Those students and workers did not die in vain." Just recently, she was pleased to read about the government's efforts, to bring reforms to China. Shu said she is very optimistic about these' changes. Watkins Community Museum 1047 Massachusetts St. Hours: Closed Monday; 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday; 1:30 - 4 p.m. Sunday. The Weaver's Store of Lawrence: 1857-1992 Basketball Men: Early Careers of James Naismith and Phog Allen Clinton Lake Museum Bloomington Park East Hours: 1 - 6 p.m. Saturday; 1 - 5 p.m. Sunday. Lawrence Arts Center Lawrence Arts Center 200 W. Ninth St. Hours: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday- Friday; 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Saturday; closed Sunday. 5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday; 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Thursday. Haskell Indian Junior College Academic Support Center Haskell grounds Hours: 8 a.m. - 10 p.m. Monday- Thursday; 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Friday; 1 - 10 p.m. Sunday. "Paint or Die," a collection of painting and drawings by Sarah Oblinger and Robert Therrien. Ends Nov. 22. At Gallery A. Valley West Gallery 732 Massachusetts Hours: Closed Monday; 10 a.m. Theater & Dance "Creature and Clay" by Celia Smith & Helen Martin. Saturday thru Dec. 5. SUA movie, "Chinatown," 7 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium. Traditional Japanese Theater: Kyogen and No II. 8 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Swarthout Recital Hall. Concerts Kansas Music Teachers Association (KMTA) State Convention; Collegiate Auditions in Brass, Chamber Music, Piano, Voice, and Woodwinds. 8 a.m. Friday at Murphy Hall. KMTA Convention Concert: KU Wind Quintet with Richard Angeloleti and Rita Sloan, pianists, Swarthort Recital Hall. KMTA Convention: Junior and Senior High Auditions in Piano, Strings, and Woodwinds. 8 a.m. Saturday at Murphy Hall. Fall Concert: Collegium Musicum; Daniel T. Politoske, director, 2 p.m. Sunday at Spencer Museum of Art. Faculty Recital, Kansas Wood- winds, 8 tonight at Swarthout Hall Informal Concert: University Dance Company. 7:30 tonight at Elizabeth Sherbon Dance Theatre. The Music of 1492 by Waverly Consort, Michael Jaffee, director. 8 p.m. Thursday at Plymouth Congregational Church. Lectures & Seminars University Forum. "Whither American Regional Dialects" presented by Professor James Hartman. Hallmark Lecture, Stewart McBride, Camden, Maine, 6 p.m. Monday at Spencer Museum Auditorium. Faculty Seminar. "Creating & Eroding Canons in Art History." Marilyn Stokstad, art history. 3 p.m. Thursday at Hall Center. Get out there and vote to protect our RIGHT to CHOOSE and to preserve the RIGHT to PRIVACY. These are the candidates on the Kansas University ballot who are clearly PRO-CHOICE Presidential Senate: PRO-CHOICE STUDENTS District3-Jan Meyers--R BILL CLINTON/AL GORE--D Gloria O'Dell--D Congressional: District 3-Jan Meyers--R Kansas Senate- Kansas senate District 2-Sandy Praeger--R District 10-Tonia Salvini-D District 42-Stevi Stephens-D District 44-Barbara Ballard-D District 45-Forest Swall-D District 46-Betty Jo Charlton-D VOTE ON NOVEMBER 3RD VOTE PRO-CHOICE A. S.K. Associated Students of Kansas urges everyone to get out and vote in the election today. Voting is your right! Remember to Hawk the vote! STUDENT SENATE