4B Wednesday, October 5,1994 --- Tuesdays & Fridays are double print days only at Jayhawk Bookstore "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-6 M-Th., 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 --over. WHO officials were not ready to agree until yesterday, the first day in two weeks no deaths were reported. --over. WHO officials were not ready to agree until yesterday, the first day in two weeks no deaths were reported. PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES - Complete CYN Care - Pregnancy Testing - Depo Provera & Norplant - Tubal Ligation - Abortion / Tubal Ligation (1 procedure) - Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff * Modern State Licensed Facility PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974 COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400 health for women OUTSIDEKCRA AREA 4401 W. 109th (I-435 and Roe) 1-800-227-1918 Overland Park, KS TOLL FREE NATION/WORLD IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... CALL BIRTHRIGHT For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you FREE PREGNANCY Monday 1-3, & 6-8 Tuesday 1-3, & 6-8 TESTING.. Wednesday 1-4 843-4821 Thursday 6-8 1246 Kentucky Friday 1-4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Restaurant and Lounge 1910 Haskell Ave. Suite #6 The Name Almost Says It All Great Music Great Music Ice Cold Beer in Bottles or Draws Featuring the Best Flavored BBQ in Lawrence Lunch Specials Daily And Much More! (Like Pool, Live D.J.'s, Big Screen Television...) Open Daily 11:30am-2:00am 841-5531 Food Specials Tuesday - [steak night-10oz, top sirloin, baked potato, white bread & salad $7.00] Saturday - [chicken, beef, or veggie shishkobabs grilled outside in the afternoon] Still, people continued to go to hospitals in New Delhi with high feveres, coughs and chest congestion, the early symptoms of pneumonic plague. Indian hospitals were checking more than 4,000 people. **Dursalua** - Jambalaea **Friday** - [hot buffalo wings in the afternoon] NEW DELHI, India — For the first time in two weeks, no deaths were reported yesterday in India's plague, and the government and the World Health Organization said the epidemic will soon end. For the first time the World Health Organization agreed with the government's prognosis. The Associated Press Indian officials say plague almost over Health Secretary M.S. Dayal said nearly 95 percent of people who saw doctors for plague symptoms had tested negative. *Friday - $1.25 Lone Star bottles India's government has been saying for days that the plague is almost But he cautioned that it will take longer to stop the bubonic plague, a less fatal but more stubborn disease that has been spreading through the western state of Maharashtra since August. Pneumonic plague has killed 61 people since it broke out Sept. 20 in the western town of Surat, where the two latest victims died Monday. Hundreds of thousands of people fled Surat, spreading the plague to many other regions. SPIT SAMPLE: Steps in treating the plague in India Dalton Drink Specials Monday - Tuesday $1.25 Well drinks Wednesday- $1.75 Premium drafts Thursday - Sunday $1.75 T.B.A. cocktails $1.50 T.B.A. wells $1.75 T.J. Lane Star Officials throughout India have been handing out antibiotics, spraying poison to kill rats and fleas that transmit the disease, searching slums for people with plague symptoms, and cleaning up many garbage-strewn city streets. Without antibiotics: ANTIBIOTICS: 2 QUARANTINED: Antibiotic tetracycline or doxycycline administered in high doses Kills 90% of the time Patient usually released three days after therapy begins With antibiotics: Kills 5% of the time 4 RECOVERY: Knight-Ridder Tribune SOURCES: American Medical Association Encyclopedia of Medicine, Centers for Disease Control World Book Medical Encyclopedia research by BRINEA SRK Few Muslims remain in Bosnia, Serbs in control The Associated Press TUZLA, Bosnia-Herzegovina — First came intimidation and terror, then expulsion. Now, after 29 months of war, the job is nearly done. Northern and eastern Bosnia are almost purely Serb. What the last sorry groups of Muslims straggling into Tuzla from northeastern towns represent is perhaps even more tragic than the combined weight of their suffering. Their expulsions by Bosnian Serbs mark the end of an era extending back centuries, when Muslims, Serbs and Croats shared land as friends and neighbors. Now only several thousand non-Serbs remain in northern and eastern Bosnia, and probably only a few hundred in the northeast corner. "My great-grandfather and his father lived in Janja. But I fear that no Muslim will ever be born there again." said Habid Sabanovic as he surveyed his new "home" — a sea of mattresses and refugees crowded into a Tuzla sports hall. Living together was rare easy. Under 500 years of Ottoman rule, animosities bubbled between Turks and Bosnians who converted to Islam and Serbs and Croats who remained Christian. Serb-Croat killings in neighboring Croatia during World War II spilled into Bosnia. Croats razed Croat villages. Croats, sometimes helped by Muslims, leveled Serb towns. THE NEWS in brief Still, bonds of friendship and family eventually helped heal those wounds. Then came this war, with mass expulsions that have changed the population patterns of Bosnia, perhaps forever. Serb purges of non-Serbs began shortly after the first shots were fired in April 1902. Of about 2 million people uprooted by the war, 750,000 are non-Serbs from eastern and northern Bosnia, according to U.N. statistics. WASHINGTON House leaders move up vote on trade accord House leaders scheduled a vote on a new global trade accord for today, shrugging off bipartisan pressure to postpone a decision until after the election. House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., and Minority Leader Bob Michel, R-III., told reporters yesterday there would be no delay in the vote on legislation implementing the accord, negotiated under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. However, accord supporters must win a key procedural vote before a planned four-hour debate and a vote on the GATT bill itself can occur. Rep. David Bonior, D-Mich., the majority whip, said Republicans indicated they would provide only 40 to 50 of the 218 votes needed to clear the procedural hurdle. Although Michel is supporting consideration of GATT, Rep. Newt Gingrich of Georgia, the No.2 Republican in the House, is leading a push to postpone it. The Senate already has put off the vote until Dec. 1. Some Republicans are anxious to deny President Clinton a victory before the Nov. 8 midterm elections. Meanwhile, some House Democrats, pressured by unions opposed to GATT, are considering postponement as well. The 123-nation accord would cut worldwide tariffs by about $740 billion, reduce other barriers to trade and extend the rules of world trade to services and intellectual property, such as computer programs and drug patents. MADRID, Spain World Bank plans to include women Little of substance will be accomplished at the three-day meeting. The real decisions were made in weekend preparatory sessions, where the 50-year-old institutions pledged to try and use aid more wisely and include more women and the poor in decision-making. Demonstrators accused the IMF and World Bank of "50 years of destruction" yesterday as central bankers and finance chiefs opened the annual meeting of the lending institutions. Protesters, however, used the opening to trumpet their belief that International Monetary Fund-World Bank rules promote poverty and dislocation among developing nations, which must adhere to strict economic rules to qualify for loans. The two agencies admit past mistakes. As World Bank president Lewis Preston said, they are now focusing on environmental protection and promoting the role of women. Golan Heights Syria must reach compromise, Isreal says Syrian President Hafez Assad must compromise in order to have peace, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said yesterday. Peres called Assad's demand for all of the Golan Heights, a strategic enclave Syria lost to Israel in the 1967 Six-Day war, only an initial move in the negotiations to be resumed this weekend through Secretary of State Warren Christopher. Israel's opening position was to offer Syria a phased withdrawal from the Golan Heights in exchange for diplomatic and economic relations, but without any promise to give up all the land. The area serves as a military buffer and home to 13,000 Israeli Jews. Christopher will travel to the Middle East this weekend, to try to hurry a peace accord between Israel and Syria. WASHINGTON China keeps nuclear technology, deal says China and the United States concluded a major agreement yesterday designed to halt the spread of Chinese missile technology to Pakistan and around the world. They also agreed to cooperate in promoting an end to the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons. Russian President Boris Yeltsin proposed such a ban in a speech last week to the United Nations General Assembly. At the same time, the Clinton administration announced it would remove economic sanctions imposed against China in August 1993. The sanctions stopped delivery of $400 million to $500 million in American technology. Sanctions levied against Pakistan in 1993 were not lifted, however. Discussions to "achieve key nonproliferation goals" are continuing, the State Department said. WASHINGTON Drugs to Cuba ban questioned by group WASHINGTON A human rights law group filed a petition against the government on Tuesday charging that bans on the sale of U.S. food and medicines to Cuba violate international law and cause widespread suffering on the island. "We are, in effect, killing innocent, helpless, defenseless Cuban citizens," said Dr. Anthony Kirkpatrick, a University of South Florida anesthesiologist. He said at a news conference that a tightening of the embargo in 1992 has brought about increased suffering among Cubans with diseases such as asthma and pneumonia. A State Department official said Cuba's problems are caused primarily by Cuba's failed system, not by the U.S. embargo. Compiled from The Associated Press. One Year Anniversary Sale! During the month of October, Buy One Item At Regular Receive one at a unique boutique Second item must be of equal or less value 30%Off* 713 Mass. M-W 10-6 Th.Sat. 10-8 Sum. 12-5 749-1664 WEEKLY SPECIALS IN STORE! ATTENTION PRE-MED STUDENTS USEFUL for Freshmen & Sophomores IMPORTANT for Juniors ESSENTIAL for Seniors who have not yet submitted Fall '95 applications INFORMATION MEETING Wednesday, Oct. 5, 7:00 pm Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union Representatives from KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss: *Application Procedures *InterviewProcess *Admission Requirements *Alternate Health Professions For more info. call the Pre-Med Office at 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall }