8 University Daily Kansan / Monday December 2, 1991 Introducing 386sx/16 • VGA Monitor • DOS 5.0, Windows 3.0 • 40 Mb Hard Drive • Mouse, Keyboard • 2 Mb RAM • 1 Yr. On-Site Warranty ONLY $1,295 486/33 • Super VGA Monitor • DOS 5.0, Windows 3.0 • 120 Mb Hard Drive • Mouse, Keyboard • 4 Mb RAM • 1 Yr. On-Site Warranty ONLY $2,895 *All Prices Subject to Change ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER Free parking in rear of store ◆ Open M-F: 10am-6pm, Sat: 10-5 813 MASS ◆ DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE ◆ 843-7584 Corrected Final Examinations Schedule - Fall 1991 Examination time: Examination Date: Regular Examinations for MORNING CLASSES Regular Examinations for AFTERNOON CLASSES SPECIAL EXAMINATIONS < exceptions to regular examinations and Regular examinations for EVENING CLASSES> Tuesday, Dec. 3 through Tuesday, Dec. 10 No Final Examinations will be administered on these days. No Final Exams Tuesday, Dec. 10 STOP DAY No classes No examinations STOP DAY No classes No examinations STOP DAY No classes on this day. No examinations on this day. Wednesday, Dec. 11 7:30 Tue, Thur, Sat** 8:00 Tue, Thur*** 8:30 Tue, Thur Sat** 3:30 Tue, Thur** 4:00 Tue, Thur*** 4:30 Tue, Thur** Mathematics 002, 011, 115, 121, 122, 123, 141, 142 Off campus classes which met Wednesday evenings Lawrence classes which met Thursday evenings Lawrence classes which met Thursday evenings Thursday, Dec. 12 9:30 Tue, Thur Sat** 3:30 Tue, Thur** 4:00 Tue, Thur*** 4:30 Tue, Thur** No examinations will be administered at this time. Friday, Dec. 13 7:30 Mon, Wed Fri* 10:30 Tues, Thur Sat** 12:30 Mon, Wed Fri* No examinations will be administered at this time. Saturday, Dec. 14 LANGUAGES includes all sections of the following course when Offered: FRIEN: 110, 111, 112, 114, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 220, 213, 214, 240, 241, ITAL: 110, 120, 230, 240, GERM: 104, 108, 112, 216, SLAV: 104, 108, 110, 112, 213, 216, 217, LAN: 104, 108, JPN: 104 Business 610 and 616 Off campus classes which met Monday evenings Lawrence classes which met Monday evenings Monday, Dec. 16 11:00 Tues, Thur*** 11:30 Tues, Thur Sat** 1:30 Mon, Wed Fri* Business 610 and 616 Off campus classes which met Monday evenings Lawrence classes which met Monday evenings Tuesday, Dec. 17 8:30 Mon, Wed Fri* 2:30 Mon, Wed Fri* Western Civilization 14, 204 Computer Science 128, 200 Chemical and Petroleum Engineering 121 Business 510, 605 Off campus classes which met Tuesday evenings Lawrence classes which met Tuesday evenings Wednesday, Dec. 18 9:30 Mon, Wed Fri* 3:30 Mon, Wed Fri* Biology 104 Physics 115, 211, 212, 213, 214, 313 Business 602 Thursday, Dec. 19 10:30 Mon, Wed Fri* 12:30 Tue, Thur*** 4:30 Mon, Wed Fri* No examinations will be administered at this time. Friday, Dec. 20 11:30 Mon, Wed Fri* 1:30 Tue, Thur*** 1:30 Tue, Thur** No examinations will be administered at this time. Includes 5 and 4 credit hour classes; 3 credit hour classes which met Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. *Includes 3 credit hour classes which met tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays; 3 credit hour classes which met tuesdays, and Thursdays; 2 credit hour classes which met tuesdays and Thursdays, or tuesdays and Saturdays, or tuesdays and Saturdays; 1 credit hour classes which met tuesdays and Saturdays. Holiday Phenomenon: COLLEGE STUDENT EMITS HOLIDAY GLOW BY TOUCHING SHINING OBJECT! The student who startled the campus by emitting a holiday glow is still undecided about a mini-series. "If I do it, I want to work with Meryl and Kevin, but I don't think my experience, while very memorable, is that big a deal," said the modest junior. it all started when an ArtCarped ring was chosen from a large selection of men's and women's finely crafted gold rings. The ring with its lifetime guarantee was a holiday gift. After wearing it, the student began to emit a holiday glow. "My ArtCarved ring has a lot of memories for me. I'm just lucky I have parents who ask me what I want and then give it to me." When last seen the celebrity junior was still glowing. ARTCARVED COLLEGE JEWELRY ArtCarved. The Ring That Remembers Mon,Tues & Wed • December 2,3,4 10:00am to 4:00pm KU Bookstores • Kansan Union • Level 2 Togo prime minister calls for aid in preventing coup The Associated Press LOME, Togo — Soldiers loyal to former military dictator Gen. Grassingbe Eyadema have not kept their promise to retreat from Lome after a coup attempt, the fledgling civilian government said yesterday. Prime Minister Joseph Koffghif's interim government, which is charged with ending Eyadema's 24-year military rule and holding free elections, appoint for international aid to prepare the former dictator from retaking work. A government minister called his government's plight a test case for Western governments' promises to help the country recover that has swept Africa in recent years. "We are appealing for help from the world to protect democracy." Horatio Freitas, minister of sports, youth and works, said in a telephone interview. "Eyadema wants to retake power. If he succeeds in Togo, it will take a precedent. Everywhere in Africa, these milieu of military to make a comeback," he said. Troops that had surrounded Koffigh's palace with tanks Thursday withdrew Saturday when France threatened military intervention. throughout the city, Freitas said. But the troops returned in jeeps and armored personnel carriers. They patrolled the oceanside palace and The soldiers, who continued to occupy the state radio station they seized Wednesday, broadcast communiques saying they had returned to the palace. Despite the soldiers' return, Lome was calm yesterday. France and the United States condemned the coup. Saturday, France sent 30 paratroopers into Togo to protect its embassy and an estimated 3,000 citizens living in Lome. The paratroopers were among 300 soldiers from France's rapid deployment force that were flown Saturday to neighboring Benin after Koffigh asked Paris to honor a mutual defense pact. French foreign affairs representative Daniel Bernard said that France, which had intervened in 1886 to help Eyadema stay in power, would protect its citizens and would ensure that the nation to democracy in Togo succeeded. Pro-Eyadema troops have made several attempts to overthrow the interim government. The former dictator was stripped of all but ceremonial powers in August after widespread unrest and strikes. The latest coup attempt, however, was the most serious. Soldiers killed 23 civilians in the attempted takeover. population: 3.2 million Area: 23,000 square miles,a little smaller than Maine Language: French, Kabiye, Ewe Religion: 50% African native religions, 35% Christian, 15% Muslim Main industry: Agriculture employs 70% of workers Principal crops: Cotton, cocoa, coffee Drug lords turn to Nicaragua Knight-Ridder Tribune News Remote Atlantic shore provides haven for cocaine traffickers The Associated Press BLUEFIELDS, Niceragua — From Monkey Point to Pearl Lagoon, packages of narcotics wash onto the beaches of Niceragua's Atlantic shore, the newest cocaine coast of Colombian drug lords. What's more, cocaine and crack are addicting a people so innocent that seven once died from eating cocaine they mistook for flour. "The problem right now is not major, but it's here and this is still an undeveloped market," said Roger Ramirez, Bluefields police chief. "Drugs are an evil that corrupts the soul. We are trying to stop them." "Drugs are an evil that corrupts the soul. We are trying to stop them." "Back then, the trail ended in Costa Rica and began again in Honduras," said Fred Villareal, the U.S. Dug Enforcement Administration officer Drug traffickers stayed clear of Nicaragua during most of the 1980s, when the leftist Sandinistas ruled and were fighting U.S.-supported contra rebels. They feared that anyone caught with drugs would be branded a CIA spy and thrown in jail. Roger Ramirez Roger Ramirez Bluefields, Nicaragua, police chief incharge of Nicaragua. Sandinista anti-aircraft batteries were on constant lookout for enemy aircraft, he said. Things changed, officials say, and the Sandinistas lost the 1990 elections and the war ended. The drug lords turned their eyes to Nicaragua, particularly the remote, sparsely populated Atlantic coast. Nicaraguan police and DEA officials say the traffickers look to Nicaragua both as a new market for drugs and a transit point in the drug pipeline from Colombia to the United States. Intense military surveillance is a thing of the past, and the meager national budget leaves local authorities without equipment needed to combat the equipment. "Out of all the countries from Mexico to Argentina, in terms of assets to work with, this is absolutely the worst," said Vilareal, who has spent 20 years fighting the illegal drug trade. On Nov. 3, officers seized 1,650 pounds of high-grade cocaine in Nicaragua's biggest-ever drug raid. But the raid took place only after national police chief Rene Vivhadh to borrow $1,000 from a private source to pay for the roundup. Patrol cars can cover little territory on an allotment of three gallons of fuel a day and police officers, who may earn only $50 a month, are easy marks for bribes. Before the Nov. 3, raid, the biggest haul was 710 pounds of cocaine discovered last year when a Colombian light plane ran out of gas and crashed-landed. Tommy Hilfiger Tommy Hilfiger Exclusively at 843-0454 843 Massachusetts BRITCHES CORNER