8 University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, October 8.1991 The Dominator is back! Get a 12" medium 1-topping pizza for $399 Call Us! N. of 15th St. 841-8002 832 Iowa DOMINO'S PIZZA NOBODY KNOWS LIKE DOMINO'S How You Like Pizza At Home S. of 15th St. 841-7900 1445 W 23rd Hours: Mon-Thurs: 4pm-1am Fri-Sat 11am-2am Sun 11am-1am How You Like Pizza At Home. Offergood Monday and Tuesdayonly. Bonus Coupon The Dominator $3^{99}$ Get a 12” medium pizza with one topping for just $3.99. Valid Monday and Tuesday only. How You Like Pizza At Home. No Coupon Required Limited Time Offer Five Dollar Frenzy $500 Give a large pizza with one topping for iust $5.00. Additional toppings 95¢ each No Coupon Required. HOW YOU LIKE FIZZA AT HOME Account Executives of the Month Campus account executive Brian Wilkes is a junior from Chicago, Ill. majoring in advertising. Upon graduation, he would like to work in the account management department of an advertising agency. Brian enjoys basketball and other outdoor activities. Cindy Keek is a senior majoring in advertising. After graduation, Cindy would like to work in the research department of an advertising agency. Cindy enjoys swimming, aerobics, and mere relaxation. Retail account executive Regional account executive Dan Hadel is a senior from Overland Park, Ks. majoring in advertising. In his spare time, Dan likes to windsurf or play raquetball. Upon graduation in December, Dan plans to pursue a career in marketing. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Retail account executive Suzanne Wilks is a Suzanne Wilks is a senior from Overland Park, Ks. majoring in advertising. In addition to working on the Daily Kansan, Suzanne is a member of the KU flag corps. Also, she enjoys playing volleyball and listening to jazz. After graduation, Suzanne would like to work for a sales promotion agency. A free educational forum Depression is as common as the common cold. Like the common cold, depression can strike anyone at any time. But, unlike the common cold, depression can be cured. We all experience depression over the course of a lifetime, and one fourth of us experience a depression that warrants treatment. Only a third of us who could benefit from professional help seek it. For those who don't, the symptoms may fade away but are likely to recur. The sooner depression is detected and treated, the more effective the results. A presentation on depression by the Menninger professional staff As part of National Mental Illness Awareness Week, The Menninger Clinic will present a free public Depression Education Forum that features A question and answer period coordinated by Menninger mental health professionals A voluntary, self-administered questionnaire, and An opportunity, if you choose, to meet privately with a Menninger mental health professional. (This five-minute screening is designed to be informational and will provide free professional guidance, but it is not a substitute for a detailed, psychiatric evaluation.) At Menninger we've been helping people with depression for 65 years. We invite you to learn more about this widely misunderstood and very treatable illness. This is an opportunity for you to help yourself or someone you know. No reservations are required. The 30-minute film Depression: The Storm Within A voluntary, self-administered questionnaire. and Wednesday, October 9 4-6 pm or 7-9 pm Seeyle Conference Center 5800 SW Sixth Street Topeka, KS From any city in Missouri or Kansas, please call for further information 18003519058.ext.777. Director To reach Menninger from I-70, exit I-70 at Wanamaker Road and turn north onto Wanamaker. Wanamaker will curve right onto Sixth Street. Turn left at the light, the main campus entrance. Directions German scientists win Nobel Prize The Associated Press STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Two German won the Nobel Prize in medicine yesterday for discovering how cells communicate, a development that has caused the spread of cancer the cause of such debilitating diseases as diabetes and cystic fibrosis. Awarded the $1 million prize by the Nobel Assembly of the Karlinska Institute were Erwin Neher, 47, and Bert Sakmann, 49, of the Max-Planck Institutes in Goettingen and Heidelberg, Germany. It is unusual for Nobel Prize winners to be so young, but Neher and Sakmann's methods are now used worldwide by scientists. Their technique was perfected in 1981 and was used immediately to test and modify existing medicine. Their major discovery, a way to record and observe the ion channels, tunnel-like passageways from the interior of a cell, was made in the mid-1970s. The technique led to modification and improvement of existing medicines, but the discovery is so recent it has yet to result in any new drugs, said Sten Grillner, a Karlinska scientist. Scientists estimate that new "designer drugs" stemming from the twoGermans' work are five to10 years away. The Nobel Assembly said the two AMPRIDE Germans' work was used in the study of such diseases as cystic fibrosis and diabetes, as well as cardiovascular disorders, epilepsy and anxiety. Gas*Food Mart*Auto Repair 23rd and Haskell It said Neher and Sakmann "conclusively established that ion channels do exist and how they function." Cells communicate with another using the 40 to 104 channels that each cell Breathtaking!!! Including Neher and Sakmann, 14 Germans have received the Nobel Prize in medicine since 1901. The prize will be presented Dec. 10, the anniversary of the death of Swedish dynamite inventor and industrialist Nobel, who endowed the Nobel Prizes. The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents The Original and Only! Folklorico de Mexico Amalia Ha垦安班, Direcet战和Choiseoogapher A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program "Beautiful... Dazzling... It's Gorgeous!" The New York Times 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, October 15, 1991 Georgia Neese Gray Performance Hall Topeka Performing Arts Center Partially funded by the Mild America Alliance "Dance on four tours," and the Kansas Arts Commission and National Enrollment for the Arts, an award-protected provided by the KU Student Art Center. Tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office and the Toppera Performing Arts Box Office. Student tickets available at the SUA Club, Kansas Union all audition received, public $19, $16, KU and 21 student $50 & $8, senior citizen and other students $18 & $15, to charge by phone call 913/864-3982 or in caller app 233-7177. Reservations for bus service to the Tacoma Performing Arts Center can be made through the Murphy Hall Bus Office, for information on bus service and car pools. 913-843-3892 Bus tickets for KU students are available through the box office, the reservation deadline for the 87 free student tickets is 5:00 p.m. Friday October 11. Too Terrific for Words! PER HOUR FINANCE YOUR COLLEGE CAREER WITH UNITED PARCEL SERVICE WE CAN OFFER YOU: - M-F (NO WEEKENDS) - M-F (NO WEEKENDS) · POSSIBLE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES · MEDICAL, DENTAL, AND VISION CARE BENEFITS · SHIFTS TO FIT YOUR SCHEDULE · PAID VACATIONS / HOLIDAYS We will be interviewing October 9, 10-2 p.m. on campus for part-time loader/unloader positions. 3-4 hour shifts. Immediate openings for 11:00 am and 11:00 pm shifts. Contact the placement office 110 Burge Union to schedule an interview WORKING FOR STUDENTS WHO WORK FOR US UPS DELIVERS EDUCATION EOE M/F