University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 20.1991 9 Julie Denesha/ Specialto the KANSAN Tim Furnish, Westwood senior, measures a Stryfoam board for the first draft of a project for his industrial design class. Furnish was preparing yesterday to construct a light fixture for his final project. Senator admits he broke law, resigns Bright idea The Associated Press Robbins, 48, was accused in a two-count complaint of shaking down special interests, bribery and obstructing justice. SACRAMENTO, Calif. — State Sen. Alan Robbins, head of the Senate Insurance Committee, was charged yesterday with federal racketeering and filing a false tax return. He resigned immediately. U. S. Attorney George O'Connell said Robbins, a Democrat, had cooperated with investigators and intended to plead guilty. The senator acknowledged breaking the law in his resignation letter. "After practicing both self-denial and public denial, I came to the conclusion that it was time to drop the shield of pretense and recognize that a number of actions I had taken as senator required the standards of law," Robbins said. Robbins' committee is one of the most powerful and most visible in the state Senate and is a lever for camaraderie. The special interests as insurers and lawyers Robbins is the third current or former senator to face federal charges in the last 21/2 years. Charges against others are likely, prosecutors said. Exhibit shows Holocaust from child's perspective The Associated Press NEW YORK — Faint photographs of children with faraway eyes hang on the museum's walls. School children are asked to touch one of the 1.5 million dots making up the photographs and give it a name, as if it were a real child. That simple exercise holds a message of tolerance for U.S. youngsters that reaches powerfully across five decades. The 1.5 million tiny photographic dots represent the 1.5 million children whose lives turned from normalcy to tragedy. The same can be said for no other reason than that they were Jewish, Gypsies or others deemed by their oppressors to be "undesirables." It's part of a unique traveling exhibit, "Remember the Children: Daniel's Story," which depicts the Holocaust through a child's eyes. It began a six-month stay yesterday at the Museum of the City of New York. Developed by the federally mandated U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, the exhibit has previously appeared at the Museum of History in Los Angeles and the Historical History Museum in Los Angeles. whohasexpressed Naziismympathiesin the past,ran unsuccessfully for Louisiana governor. A permanent version will be housed at the U.S. Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. It is tiled to open in April 1993. "Daniel's Story" invites children of all backgrounds to draw lessons from the Holocaust for their own lives. The exhibit tells the story of a 6-year-old German Jew in 1933. "Daniel" isn't just one child, but an accurate historical composition of what happened to him and how from the rise of Nazism until the end of World War II. Daniel and his father Daniel's story may be about European children who died 50 years ago, but the lessons about prejudice, stereotyping, insults and bigotry take on contemporary meanings for U.S. children, especially those from minority and disadvantaged backgrounds. survive a concentration camp; his mother and sister do not. The exhibit manages to be graphic while omitting the most harrowing aspects of the Holocaust. It's geared for children 10 and older, but even some 8-year-olds might grasp its meanings, said Sara J. Bloomfield, director of the holocaust council. Join us for KARAOKE from 10:30pm-1:00am and enjoy $3.25 pitchers of beer $6.95 Magnum Margaritas all day & all night Wednesday, Nov.20th. 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 HUNTERS is Clothing for Men & Women. HUNTERS is Calvin Klein Russ Berens Boston Traders Henry Grethel Eagles Eye Alexander Julian and more. NATURAL WAY Now up to 30% off! Natural Fiber Clothing 820-622 Mass. 841-0100 WOULD YOU CALL THIS MAN? Beginning in 1976 John Boss began his career harassing people over the airwaves with a home-built CB radio. If you can put please call in at 864-4746,2-3pm weekdays on KJHK 90.7 FM "Do it for the Truckers!" the Hottest College Talk Show In The Nation! Rob: I would be really upset. Would you still be friends? You would still invite him to dinner? Rob: Yes. Would you hug him? Rob: Yes. Look, my best friends are my family, And if one of us got sick, we'd all be there for support. 1-800-342-AIDS National AIDS Hotline: Servicio Español: Paid for by 1-800-344-7432 TTY-Def Access: Student Senate 1-800-348-7895 AIDS Task Force AMERICA RESPONDS TO AIDS Jon Ramirez Sara Gard Christine Lynn Pam McElwee Forrest Swall John Nalbandian Marcia Epstein Jon Humiston International Change- Become A Part of It... The Center For Community Outreach Would Like To Thank Art & Design- ·Bath, England ·Peyresq, France ...And A Special Thanks to Student Senate For Making "Into The Streets" Possible Study Abroad With The University of Kansas -Summer Programs 1992- Humanities, Languages, & Cultures- The University of Kansas Office of Study Abroad 203 Lippincott Hall lawrence, Kansas 66045-1731 (913) 864-3742 Marc Simon Jill Russell Annie Mak Liz Smith Linda Mullins Lanaae Heine Laura Bellinger Jennifer Zucco - Copenhagen, Denmark "Europe In Transition" "Architecture & Design" For More Information, Contact- - London, England "International Economics" don's册 of Economics - Barcelona, Spain - Eutin, Germany - Florence, Italy - Great Britain - Guadalajara, Mexico - Hiratsuka, Japan - Holzkirchen, Germany - Paris, France -DIS International Study Program- -London School of Economics- How You Like Pizza At Home. INCREDIBLE SPECIAL! 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