8 University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 7, 1991 CREATION STATION *Highest Quality* T-SHIRTS • HATS • SWEATS YOU NAME IT, WELL PRINT IT FULL-COLOR PROCESS PRINTING SCREENPRINTING PARTY FAVORS 730 MASS. 841-1999 "The atmosphere (at KU's Memorial Stadium) was kind of eerie. I can't remember a game in which the crowd was so quiet. There wasn't much electricity in the air and there were a lot of empty seats. There are a lot of cheap people down there. There are more people on the hill than in the stadium." Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne Omaha World-Herald November 11, 1990 Don't Let This Happen Again! - Buy a ticket ·Sit in the stadium ·Wear blue and ·Be loud! Kansas vs. Nebraska Saturday, November 9 1:00 p.m. Memorial Stadium FREE KU Team photo to the first 10,000 fans! For tickets, call 1-800-34-HAWKS or 864-3141. American Indian group receives Student Senate funds for speakers By Blaine Kimrey Kansan staff writer With the help of a $1,631. 67 allocation last night from Student Senate, members of the Native American Student Association can breathe a little easier. Cavarly Smith, president of NASA, said the association had secured two speaking engagements for Native Americans before asking for Senate financing. Although the organization had not signed a contract with two American Indian activists, Henrietta Mann and Barbara Cameron, to speak at KU, it already had made a verbal agreement with the two women, Smith said. "I feel a lot better now that Senate has financed this," he said. Smith said everyone would benefit from hearing the two women speak. The speakers are not only American Indian activists but also outspoken advocates for the preservation of civil liberties, he said. Mann will speak at 7 p.m. Nov. 18 at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. She is the director of Native American studies at the University of Montana and the national coordinator for Indian Religious Freedom Coalition. She also was named as one of the top 10 professors in the United States in the Mar.21,1991,issue of Rolling Stone. Kristin Lange, off-campus senator, said she admired Mann. "She's very eloquent and at the same time very strong in her speaking," she said. Cameron will speak at 7 p.m. Nov. 25 at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. She is the executive director of the Community United Against Violence in San Francisco and co-founder of the Gay American Indian Association in San Francisco. Smith said he hoped the two speakers would raise campus consciousness about American Indian student concerns. One of those concerns is the lack of American Indian classes at the University. Smith said that KU would offer only five American Indian classes during the spring semester. He said he hoped the speakers would prompt the administration to add more American Indian classes to the curriculum. Jason McIntosh, senior senator, agreed. "It's a need that we need to address, and it will be addressed," he said. - Senate clarified procedural definitions in Student Senate Rules and Regulations. Senate allocated $2,559 to pay for free films during finals. Inseminated tiger gives birth to cub The Associated Press OMAHA, Neb. — The world's first artificially conceived Siberian tiger has been born to a 71/2-year-old tiger at the Henry Doorkly Zoo. The cub's birth Tuesday is a significant development in the effort to help ensure the genetic diversity and health of not only captive tigers but also endangered jaggers, said by shrinking habitats, like Lee Simmons, director of the zoo. The birth culminated 14 years of work between the Omaha zoo and the National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C. The Washington zoo developed a specialized insemination technique used to fertilize the tiger, Simons said. Zoo officials had not been able to get close enough to the new tiger to determine its sex but said the cat and mother were doing fine and were leaving alone. The Etc. Shop NEW MOVIE 928 Mass "The kit is acting and looking very The world's first test-tube tigers were born in April 1990 at the Omaha zoo. One of the Bengal cubs died, but the other still lives at the zoo. strong, and the mom is doing everything right," Simmons said. The Siberian cub is the second species at the Omaha zoo to be bred through artificial insemination. Several gaur, a breed of wild cattle, were conceived through insemination. The cub's father is a 9 1/2-year-old Siberian. SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS The simple act of putting on a condom can save your life, if they're used properly and What Have You Got Against A Condom? every time you have sex. For more information about AIDS and condoms, call 1-800-342-AIDS. Paid for by Student Senate AIDS Task Force 1-800-342-AIDS Good Luck Jayhawks! YOUR SOURCE FOR AFFORDABLE, IST QUALITY, OFFICIALLY LICENSED KU MERCHANDISE Russell Athletic 9oz. Sweatshirt $13.95 Large selection of KU Prints RUSSELL ATHLETIC 16 OZ. PRO COTTON $39.95 KU PRINTS SOFFEE MILLS 11OZ. REVERSE WEAVE $24.95 KU PRINTS 100% COTTON HEAVY WEIGHT Ts LARGE SELECTION OF KU PRINTS RUSSELL ATHLETIC SEWN-ON PRO CREWS 16 OZ. $44.95 9 OZ. $18.95 KU Hats $5.95 KU Trash- cans $5.95 KU Socks $1.50 LARGE SELECTION OF 1ST QUALITY NAME BRAND SHOES AT 30% TO 40% OFF REGULAR RETAIL PRICES BIKE Saucony Reebok footJoy BROOKS CHECK WITH BALLARDS ON HOW TO GET YOUR PRIME SEATS FOR KU FOOTBALL