University Daily Kansan / Monday, October 21, 1991 Beads, Beads and more Beads! Nomadic Notions 9264 MacKillan Bishop Street 854-731-3611 854-731-3611 $1.00 off all Hamburgers $1.45 16 oz. Drafts $1.95 Canadian Club Highballs LATE NIGHT SPECIAL 9 - 12pm 1/2 price Milano Sticks Cocktails served until 2:00am 2429 IOWA, LAWRENCE 841-9922 DIS-ORIENTED ABOUT SPRING ENROLLMENT? Well, all new students are invited to attend: REORIENTATION October 22: Ellsworth Hall 6:00 to 7:00 p.m. or October 23: Corbin Hall 6:00 to 7:00 p.m. WHY SHOULDIGO? - accurate information about advising and enrollment · information about campus involvement · opportunity to talk with KU staff, orientation assistants, and other students. ICE CREAM SOCIAL WILL FOLLOW Ice Cream Social Sponsored by Board of Class Officers The Office of New Student Orientation 864-4270 Last Chance! To get your yearbook portrait taken If you are an undergraduate and have not yet had your portrait taken, HURRY UP AND DO IT. HURRY UP AND DO IT. Location: Strong Hall Rotunda TIME: Mon, Wed.-Fri.: 9:00-NOON; 1:00-5:00 Tuesday: 1:00-5:00; 6:00-9:00 Sitting fee: $2 for freshmen, sophomores and juniors (4 poses); $4 for seniors (10 poses) Your sitting fee will be waived if you purchase or have purchased your copy of the 1992 Jayhawker. RESERVE YOUR SPOT IN THE 1992 JAYHAWKER TIMEX FITNESS WEEK Reebok OCTOBER 21-24,1991 Monday October 21 ULTIMATECLUB (NoPre-Registration) Frisbee Golf Tournament 1.00 p.m. camp; Campanile Tuesday October 23 FITNESS CENTER 122ROBINSON Free Body Fat Testing 1:00p.m.-3:00p.m. WEIGHT ROOM DEMOS 4:20p.m.-5:00p.m.in Robinson Weight Room *REGISTER FOR FREE DRAWINGS IN 208 ROBINSON: Ocean Spray Drinks, T-Shirts, Watches, Reebok Shoes. Tuesday October 23 Monday October 21 and Wednesday October 23 WELLNESS CENTER 138 ROBINSON Computerized Stress Testing 9:00a.m.-11:00 a.m. & 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m. Wednesday October 23 Check blood pressure & pulse form 11:00a.m. -1:00 p.m. Lobby Noon Walk: Meet in Robinson Lobby at 12:00 p.m. Thursday October 24 Reebok - World's Largest Aerobics Class 11:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. East Lawn o f Allen Field House. KU Recreation Services • 208 Robinson • 864-3546 Julie Jacobson / KANSAN Embarking on a race The fifth annual Quaker Oats Rover Run and Dog-N-Jog starts slowly as novice runners try to coax their dogs into joining the two-mile race. About 25 people and their pets participated in the event Saturday in Topeka. Canine participants were rewarded with scarves and bowls of water after the race. Doctors criticize fighting in Yugoslavia Relief convoy escapes civil violence to rescue 113 injured people from town The Associated Press BELGRADE, Uglystova — Brewing mortars and minefields, a relief convoy pulled in safely behind Croatian lines yesterday to turn over to hospital scores of seriously wounded men from an embattled Croatian stronghold. Doctors and European Community monitors on the convoy criticized both Serbians and Croatians for failing to cease fire during the 13-hour journey from the besieged town of Vukovar. They were especially concerned about children left behind, including more than 2,000 children, in the battered town. Fighting resumed in Croatia's eastern Slavonia region yesterday afternoon, and Croatians and Serbians were violating the latest cease-fire attempt. well as the eastern strongholds of Osiek and Vukovar. Fighting also was reported around the medieval Croatian port of Dubrovnik. And mortar shells reportedly fell on villas south of Zagreb, as More than 1,000 people have died in the fighting that began after Croatia declared independence June 25. All previous cease-fire has failed. Early yesterday, a convoy of doctors and nurses from Doctors Without Borders and EC monitors arrived and dropped off 113 seriously wounded people from Vukovar to two Croatian hospitals, said Martin Mossinkoff, a representative for Doctors Without Borders. Mossinkoff told reporters in Zagreb that a 60-year-old man, suffering third-degree burns, died six hours after arriving at a field hospital in Mikanovci, 24 miles southwest of Ukovar. The convoy came under shelling as it prepared to leave the embattled stronghold Saturday afternoon, and it was forced to make a 9-mile detour that took it through some of the most fought-over territory in Croatia. One truck carrying aid workers and several wounded hit a land mine outside Vukovar, seriously injuring two nurses hurled from the vehicle. Both were in satisfactory condition yesterday. The convoy finally moved into Croatian-held territory early yesterday morning and dropped off the most serious cases at Mikanovci. The rest went to a hospital in Djakovo, 50 miles west of Vukovar. Describing the scene in Vukovar, Dutch EC monitor Bert Nauta said, "It was terrible. The people came out to meet us waving, crying, like my people came out to greet the Allies liberating us at the end of World War II." Defense officials in Vukovar, on the Danube River border with Serbia, said as soon as a downpour ended at 2 p.m. yesterday, about 100 rockets fired from multibarrel rocket-launchers to the Serbian bank of the Danube. Croatian defense officials also accused federal troops of shelling vil- lages on the island. The Etc. Shop 843-0611 928 Mass REAL MODEL RAY BAN SAUCHT & LENSES MACINTOSH Holiday Solutions Your choices are almost limitless. Now through December 20th, you can receive incredible savings on Apple printers and monitors when you purchase a Macintosh Holiday Solutions package. Pick the Macintosh package that best fits your needs, and start taking advantage today of the Power To Be Your Best at KU. Stop by the KU Bookstores Computer Store in the Burge Union and pick up the new price list and information about the new Apple Computer loan program. Macintosh. The gift of limitless possibilities. Level 2 Burge Union 864-5697 1