6A Wednesday, September 11, 1996 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Douglas County AIDS Project Volunteer Orientation Wednesday, September 11 6:30-9:30pm Saturday, September 14 9:00-Noon Preregistration required Call 843-0040 for more information. Show You Care "Hey! Want a lot of pizza for a little dough? Come to my joint for these great deals!" Two Large 1-Topping Pizzas $1099 Your Choice of Topping! No Coupon Needed Use coupon for all times and areas. Not valid with any other offer or Coupon. Valid at participating locations. Sales tax, $8 applicable. Coffeeshaker Pizza Valid through 11/30/95 Lunch Buffet Dinner Buffet Two 10" 1-Topping Pizzas & Two 20 Oz Bottled Soft Drinks $925 Lunch Buffet $329 11 am to 2:00pm 2 days a week Additional Toppings Only 75¢ each! $349 5:00 pm-8:00pm Mon, and Tues. All-you-can-eat pizza, salad bar, pasta cheesesticks and dessert pizza! Kids ages 1-10 eat for only 35e per year of age! No Coupon Needless Do not use coupons within times and areas. Not valid with any other offer or coupon. Valid for participating locations. Sales tax, applicable. Valid through 11/30/96. Valid through 11/30/96. KOSH buffet includes free soft drink! Please present money when ordering. Drivethrough prices include tax. Not used with any other offer or coupon. Barely used. Blessed tax. Applicable, not included Handwritten receipt Only at Godfather's Pizza Lawrence 711 W. 23rd 843-6282 We Deliver! Native Americans show art The diversity of Native-American cultures, from East Coast to West Coast, can be seen in the pottery, sculpture, textiles, bead work, paintings and photography on display at the Lawrence Indian Arts Show at the Anthropology Museum in Spooner Hall. By Nicholas C. Charalambous Kansas staff writer Spoorler. The juried competition of Native-American art, now in its eight year, has garnered a national reputation for attracting traditional and contemporary works of technical skill, said Maria Martin, coordinator of the show. George Blackwood, a Cherokee artist from Lawrence, spent eight months and 500 hours working on his merit award-winning piece of Peyote-stitch bead work on pottery, In Good Relations. tions. "The saying goes: 'Treat your thread as if it's your life and the beads as the experiences that go through your life,'" Blackwood said. "The patterns come out as I'm going through, and that's why I have nature symbols in my patterns. I am a part of the earth and everything around me." Gregory Bigler, Euche artist from Sapulpa, Okla, also won a merit award for his photograph, The Last Euche-speaking Household. He said that his art was journalistic and that he wanted to provoke action so that Native-American languages remained alive and used. The exhibit features 215 works by 98 artists from 14 states. Fifty artists were new to the show, Martin said. "A lot of the photography I do is best understood by my own people," he said. Mardi Saal Judges awarded two best-of-show awards of $1,500 and 14 merit awards of $300. Twelve works were chosen for honorable mention. A youth competition for artists was included for the first time. wendy Mahsetsky-Poolaw, Kickapoo/Comanche artist from Norman, Okla., won best-of-show in two-dimensional art for a series of eight canvases depicting the formation and progress of storm clouds. Clarissa Hudson, Tlingit artist from Togosa Springs, Colo., won best-of-show in three-dimensional art for a ceremonial robe adorned with a stylized representation of Mother Earth and child in sky blue suede. All works are for sale. Prices range from $25 to $6,000. The judges recommended several exhibits for purchase by the museum, but Martin said funds were not available. The museum has purchased five art works from previous competitions. The show will continue through Oct. 20. Admission is $3 for adults and $1 for students. Sara Brooks / KANSAN Mary Annette Clause, Sanborn, N.Y., resident, won the merit award for her handmade purse at the Indian Arts Show. The show is at the Museum of Anthropology and runs through Oct. 20. Another beginning for The End Manager says new store offers more By Jeff Ruby Kansan staff writer On Sept. 3, The End Compact Disc and Tapes died and went to heaven. 7th Heaven, to be exact. "We like to think of ourselves as an alternative lifestyle store," said Jan Fichman, president of 7th Heaven, which owns several record stores in Missouri and has bought The End, 1000 Massachusetts St. "Lawrence certainly is an attractive market," Fichman said. "The owners were looking to sell, and it's a beautiful store in a great location," he said. "We aren't looking to detract from the store but to add to it product-wise. We will give the staff free rein to experiment." 7th Heaven's Missouri stores in Kansas City, Sedalia and Blue Springs specialize in compact discs and offbeat merchandise. Jim White, Lawrence store manager, said The End's change to 7th Heaven would make the shop the most eclectic record store in the area. "The store's going to be a 180-degree turn from what we had before." White said. "We are first and foremost a record store, but now we'll also be selling things like African masks, lava lamps, black lights, tobacco products, candles and incense." "Basically we'll be selling all the things that people have been asking us about before, now that we have the financial backing to sell it," White said. white said. Employee Eric Mater said of the buyout, "It is giving this store a new lease on life. It has been pretty dead for a while. Now we're combining the Creation Station, Love Garden and The Phil Zone into one. These "The store's going to be a 180-degree turn from what we had before." Jim White manager of The End owners know what they are doing. They are going to bring in gargoyles and strobe lights and stuff." Phil Sisson, owner of The Phil Zone, 1405 Massachusetts St., said his store was wary of the new competition and wondered if 7th Heaven's opening would cut into his business. "I sure thought so when I heard it was opening," he said. "I just hope a home-grown business can survive. I know we deal with a lot of the same distributors. It makes me realize I'm going to work harder. I don't know what to think about it." Despite 7th Heaven's changes to The End's atmosphere, students who shopping at The End said they would continue to frequent the store. Joel Dickerson, Iola freshman, said the change didn't matter as long the store continued to sell CDs. "They do have the best selection I've seen in Lawrence, and prices are very competitive," he said. White said the store would be changing for a few months. we have a lot of plans, so we may never be a finished product," he said. "But every that works here is happier about the change." 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