2 University Daily Kansan / Monday. October 28, 1991 ON CAMPUS The KU juggling club will meet at 1:30 p.m. today at the flagpole in front of Strong Hall. The KU kempo karate club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. The Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. - The Asian-American Student's Association will meet at 7tonight in 427 Summerfield Hall. - Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will hold a business meeting tonight. Contact the GLOSK office at 864-3091 for the meeting location. - The Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction Book Reading Club will meet at 2 tonight at the Kansas Union. ■ The department of English will sponsor a lecture titled "A Song Without Words. Arna Bontempel's 'Black Soul'". Auditorium in the Kansas Union Amnesty International will meet at tomorrow at Alcove B in the Kingfisher Building. - The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a program titled "Sexual Harassment" at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. The Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. The St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a panel discussion about poverty at 7:30 tomorrow night at rooms 201 and 202 in the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will sponsor a support group at 7:30 tomorrow night. Contact the GLOSK office for the location of the meeting Gay and Lesbian Academic and Staff Advocates will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. The KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. The Black Posts' Society will sponsor "Black to the Soul," a poetry reading, at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. The office of study abroad will sponsor an informational meeting at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at 4021 Wesco Hall about studying in Great Britain. Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Masonic Temple, 141 W. 6th St. ■ The departments of international studies and African-American studies will sponsor a lecture by Ibrahim Gambari, Nigerian ambassador to the United Nations, at 3:30 p.m. Friday at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. ON THE RECORD A person took money from a change machine between 5 p. m. Oct. 10 and 8 a.m. Oct. 11 at the Raco E. 23rd St. Car Wash, Johannesburg E. 23rd St., Lawrence police reported. The person reportedly stole the money by feeding counterfeit $1 notes into the machine and receiving $8 for each of the bills, Lawrence police reported. A man was stabbed in the neck at 1:15 a.m. Saturday at an apartment in the 1800 block of 24th Street, Lawrence police reported. The man was stabbed by an acquaintance during an argument, police said. The man was taken to the hospital and his friend and was treated and released. A man wearing black clothes and a ski mask and carrying a knife robbed Acme Dry Cleaners Inc, 925 Iowa St. at 6:25 p.m. Friday, Lawrence police reported. The man demanded money from the cash register, police said. GOP distances itself from Duke ANALYSIS The Associated Press Former KKK grand wizard says the party best reflects his political views WASHINGTON — Racial tensions pervade U.S. life and politics, but usually not in the raw form that has carried a former Klansman to the brink of a governorship and thrown the Republican Party into a dilemma. Politicians no longer block schoolhouse doorways or shout "segregation forever." Overt racism has been socially unacceptable for decades, and in more recent times, politically unwise as well. Instead, racial signals are sent with words, phrases and symbols — talk of states' rights, forced busing, welfare, fraud and racial quotas, pictures of African-American criminals and those crumbling job rejection notices. Louisiana State Rep. David Duke is employing many of these codes in his gubernatorial campaign and going much further. "We have no responsibility for this kook. He's an irresponsible extremist." The former Nazi and Ku Klux Klan leader says the races are different. Charles Black Charles Black National Republican Party consultant "European people, or white people, or black people, civilization, Christian civilization," he says. The White House and the Republic- identified with Duke, who insists the He thinks welfare mothers should be implanted with a long-term contraceptive. He says he would be "one Louisiana governor who won't get in bed with the NAACP." He blames "the rising welfare underclass" and the welfare system for crime, drug abuse, violence and lack of money for the middle class. GOP best reflects his views. "We have no responsibility for this book," says Charles Black, a consultant to the national party. "He's an irresponsible extremist." The GOP has tactical as well as moral grounds for dismay because it relies on support from relatively sophisticated suburbanities. As analyst Stuart Rothenberg put it: "Those who thought they were the party concluded that the more of the party was now a bunch of redneck, working-class, anti-Semitic racists." President Bush has made several recent moves that, calculated or not, underscore his distance from Duke and Duke's distance from mainstream Republicanism. Foremost among them was to a compromise civic-rights bill after charging for two years that it would result in racial hiring quotas. The agreement mousa what was looming as a racially divisive 1992 campaign issue. Bush also said Friday that he could not possibly support Duke, who is in a Nov. 16 runoff against Democrat Edwin Edwards. Bush said the former KKK grand wizard may have touched the fate of Mr. Obama's degree it was attractive to voters because of race or bigotry, I would denounce that vigorously." Still, Republicans have reaped electoral benefits from race-tinged issues since the passage of civil rights legislation under Lyndon Johnson's leader, Richard Nixon. Southern conservatives started gravitating away from the Democrats. The trend has intensified as elected southern Democrats have become less responsive to economically insecure whites. Women assured doctor they wanted to die Complications almost ended Kevorkian's suicide session The Associated Press DETROIT — Dr. Jack Kevioran repeatedly asked two women who sought his help to commit suicide whether they wanted to reconsider, even in the face of public pressure representing both the doctor and the women's families. Kevorkian asked Sherry Miller three times whether she wanted to die after she watched Marjorie Wantz use a machine Kevorkian devised so she could be inducted into the injection, the Detroit News reported yesterday. "Jack continually asked her if she was sure," said Geoffrey Fieger, Kevorkian's lawyer. "Each time, Sherry said, 'Yes.' Moments later, Miller pulled a mask over her face and inhaled carbon monoxide from a tank, Fieger and his partner, Michael Alan Schwartz, told the newspaper. Police found the bodies of Miller, 43, and Wantz, 58, in a cabin at a state park 40 miles north of Detroit on Wednesday night after Kevorkian reported the assisted suicides. Miller was incapacitated by multiple sclerosis. Wantz suffered from papilloma virus, a painful pelvic condition. Neither case was life-threatening. Keyvorkian counseled Miller and Wantz for about Kevorkian counselled Miller and Wantz for about two years before their deaths, the lawyers said. There were complications despite careful plans for the assisted suicides, Fieger and Schwartz said. Kevorkian intended to hook both women to the intravenous device but resorted to carbon monoxide for Miller because her veins were too delicate for a needle. Kevorkian also forgot a tourniquet and had to go get one. "I if had a clinic, I wouldn't have these problems," the doctor told his lawyers, they said. A park worker almost interrupted the procedures when he came to ask whether the group would need the cabin beyond Wednesday night. About 5 p.m., Wanted tuzzled one of two strings tied to her fingers, allowing an anesthetic into her system. When she became unconscious, her arm dropped and the second string came off, allowing lethal potassium chloride into her bloodstream, the lawyers said. Kevorkian explained the details of the procedure, asking repeatedly whether they wanted to reconsider the decision. Soon after, Miller, lying on a cot about 6 feet from Wantz, on the mask and pulled a lever allowing the camera to take a picture. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC 60454 The University Daily Kansan (USF$ 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuaffer Fint-Hall Law, Kansei, Kan $6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044A Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Good Real Food 728 Massachusetts * 842-5199 Every Day COPIERS·FAX·SUPPLIES ENGINEERING COPIERS Council Travel 831 Foster Street Evanston, IL 60201 REPROGRAPHIC CENTER LAWRENCE 8th & NEW HAMPSHIRE 842-4134 BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO SERVICE 1-800-475-5070 *fairs are each way from Kansas City based on round trip瘁. Tickets not included and resturant apply. Call for other destinations, both one and two miles. London Amsterdam Paris Madrid Geneva 23rd & Louisiana Crown Cinema VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 Bud & Busch Inflatable Cans & Long Necks $20 each Sign of the Times 9241/2 Mass. LASTING IMPRESSIONS Consignment Boutique THE MALLS Bamblin Rose (R) Sat.Sun 2:45 Bamblin Rose (R) Sat.Sun 2:45 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 Curtley Sue (PG) Shattered (R) Ricochet (R) Paradise PC-13) The Butcher's PC-13) CINEMA TWIN 3110 IOWA 841-5191 Sat Sun 2:45 Daily 5:30.7:30.9:30 Barton Fink (R) Sat. Sun 2:45 Daily 5.15, 7.10, 9:40 Necessary Roughness (RC-12) Rarton Fink/Ri SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Necessary Roughness(PG-13) 749-5122 Dickinson Dickinson 841 B500 2339 IDWA ST ERNEST;SCAREDSTUPID(PG) (5.000) 7.000 8.000 HOUSE PARTY II $ ^{(R)} $ (5-00)7258-30 We still offer students the $3.50 price at all evening showings FISHER KING $ ^{ \mathrm{R}} $ (4;30*);7.05;9:50 FRANKIE & JOHNNY $ ^{(R)} $ (4.458) 7:15 0:25 DECEIVED (PG-13) (4.35*) 7.00 OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY $ ^{(R)}$ 1.500 7.05 9.20 53 Prime-Timer Show (.)/Senior Citizen Anytime Open 24 hours 9th and Mississippi Concerned, Confidential & Personal Health Care For Women SAFE AND AFFORDABLE ABORTION SERVICES GYN CARE -- FREE PREGNANCY TESTING BIRTH CONTROL -- INCLUDING NORPLANT IMPLANTS DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH FOR WOMEN 4401 West 109th (I-435 & Roe) Overland Park, Kansas Toll Free 1-800-227-1918 VISA, Mastercard and Insurance plans accepte Providing quality health care to women since 1974 8:00 p.m. and Midnight showtimes in the Union Ballroom. 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