10 University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 23, 1991 Measure the Diet Center Difference GET A FREE BODYCOMPOSITION ANALYSIS Our advanced body composition analysis helps your Diet Center counselor pinpoint ways to make your program more effective, based on your unique levels of body fat, pounds of lean mass, body water, basal metabolic rate and lean-to-fat ratio. Come in for a free analysis and measure the difference for yourself? Your choice: Counselor./Owner Ruth Gillgannon Lose 12 pounds in 4 weeks $5900· Lose 30 pounds in 10 weeks Lose 16 pounds in 6 weeks $ 69 00 • $ 8900 Diet CENTER Center Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 10- Noon *The weight-loss professionals* EXP 9 - 30 - 91 Counseling, Supplement fee 129 95 per week, other fees may vary. 935 Iowa (Hillcrest Med. Center) 841. DIET(3438) Good at car cleaning Our Garden is well cared with other offers. © 2017 Our Garden Inc, No rights reserved FINANCE YOUR COLLEGE CAREER WITH UNITED PARCEL SERVICE WE CAN OFFER YOU: • 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 September 25, 10:2- p.m. on campus for part-time loader/unloader positions. 4- hour shifts. Contact the placement office 110 Burge Union to schedule an interview WORKING FOR STUDENTS WHO WORK FOR US UPS DELIVERS EDUCATION FOE M/F MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL SPECIALS Come by and catch the game on any of our 10 Televisions!! $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 PatrickG. Brungardt/KANSAN The KU Marching Jayhawks and areal high school bands perform a version of "Battle Hymn of the Republic" arranged by Robert Foster, KU director of bands. Sixty-five high schools participated Saturday in the Band Day halftime festivities at the Kansas-New Mexico State football game. Strike up the bands Surveys show violence up in schools The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Once again, the school year has begun with bullets rather than bells ringing through many classrooms. Big city schools are again battlegrounds. Washington, D.C. high schools had two shooting incidents in the first week of classes. The first attack was on a 16-year-old and was the execution shooting of the 16-year-old charged in the first crime. But the violence has spread well beyond inner-city boundaries. In Rapid City, S.D., a 17-year-old with a sawed-off shotgun took 22 fellow students hostage and shot up in a classroom before he was subdued. In Vaccille, those were fired into a grade school, wounding a maintenance worker, "We don't see it as an inner-city problem. It's a suburban problem, a rural problem," said George Butterfield, deputy director of the National Center for Journalism at Pepperdine University. "It's pretty much pervasive in our society." Just since the start of the school year: A 15-year-old in Baltimore shot himself in the leg while sitting in class. Problems no longer limited to inner city An assistant football coach in Salt Lake City was shot in the leg the first day of school when he intervened in a fight between gang members. An elementary school custodian in Portland, Ore., was stabbed to death. 1987 National Crime Survey report showed that nearly 3 million students, faculty, staff and visitors above the age of 12 were victims of a criminal act during the year, with 75,900 cases of aggravated assault. The Center to Prevent Handgun Violence said 65 students and six school employees were shot to death from 1986 to 1990. 201 others were severely wounded, and 242 were taken hostage by gun-wielding assailants, the center reported in a study based on news reports. Drug and gang activities were the leading cause of gun violence, but nearly as many cases related to romantic disputes, feuding-between students or playing with guns, the center-reported. "Kids are bringing guns from home to be cool, to scare somebody, for show-and-tell and for protection, "said the center's Vanessa Scherzer. "It's really a reflection of gun violence in the community." The National School Safety Center cities studies showing that four out of 10 boys and one-fourth of girls say they could obtain a bandage if they wanted. Two boys report carrying a bandung to school at least once during the school year. President Bush has set a goal of eliminating drugs and violence from the nation's schools by the year 2000. "We would really support that," Butterfield said. "But we have some real work ahead of us." Assaults on students by students jumped 47 percent in San Diego last year, from 242 to 355. In Los Angeles, they jumped 38 percent in the 1989-90 school year. a first-ever survey of school violence in Florida last year showed 46,000 significant incidents ranging from assault to one homicide. "What astounded me was the sheer magnitude of the numbers of incidents ... and how difficult it is' going to be to put some measures in that are going to reduce it," said Pat Tornillo Jr. of the Florida Education Association-United. Still, the great majority of America's 40 million primary and secondary school students are never exposed to violence so familiar to the inner-city child. Even officials in New York City, which recorded 1,366 assaults during the 1988-89 year, said violently that the attacks because of better security measures. "Our schools are not the blackboard jungles people assume," said Board of Education President Robert F. Wagner Jr. Armed attacks were scarce in Nebraska schools last year, and Omaha public school official Ron Burmood said the city enforced a strict rule of expelling any junior or senior student caught with a weapon. People are frightened by what they read about other places and Omaha takes their concerns seriously. Buried in the rocks, she fears more than something concrete." get in on the ground floor in our Platoon Leaders Class program for college freshmen, sophomores and juniors. You could start planning on a career like the men in this ad have. And also have some great advantages like: Earning $100 a month during the school year **Earning $100 a month during the sc** **As a freshman or sophomore, you can** **complete your basic training** during two six-week summer sessions and earn more than $1500 during each session **Juniores earn more than $2500 during** one ten-week summer session. ■ Seniors and graduates can be commissioned through the Officer Candidate Class Program ■ You can take free civilian flying lessons ■ You're commissioned upon graduation If you're looking to move up quickly, look into the Marine Corps' commissioning prog start off making more than $22,000 a year. We're looking for a few good men Meet the Officer Selection Officer at Wesco Beach September 23 & 24 or call toll-free 1-800-748-7274.