10 --- University Daily Kansan / Friday. September 20, 1994 EBACK'S APPLIANCE FORM SIZE REFIREGATORS FOR RENT $45-$70 FREE DELIVERY! 929 MASS. 843-4170 Independent Laundromat 26th & Iowa (1 blk west) Quiet, lots of space WE'VE MOVED Clothing & Accessories For Men & Women Contours The Etc. Shop 928 Massachusetts Lawrence, MA 914-630-0011 CORNUCOPIA A RESTAURANT & BAR Nowopentil11:00 Friday and Saturday 1801 Massachusetts 842-9637 T G I F 90¢ Games or $5/Hr Lane Rental All Weekend Rough Trade Recording Artists Recording Artists TWO (they're not two) NICE (they're not nice) GIRLS (And, they re detinitely not girls) Sunday, Sept 22, 1991 8pm Special Guests: Crushed Velvet Matadors Advance Tickets 18-and-over Bottleneck Need Plexiglas® Kennedy Glass 730 New Jersey 843-4416 1023 Massachusetts Ave. Lawrence,KS (913)843-8222 Guaranteed Lowest Prices! Guaranteed Highest Quality! MATHTUTOR Professional math tutor is here to help! --B.S. in Engineering --5 years experience --Help in any business- math, stats, or algebra Call the Math Doctor! UNIQUE GIFTS AVIREX LEATHER JACKETS BOAT HOUSE ROW SWEATERS DUCK HEAD SHIRTS DUCK HEAD PLEATEDPANTS CAMIZ SWEATERS CHRISTIAN DIOR SOCKS CAMP SOCKS 4 JAY SOCKS LEATHER BELTSL TAUROUS LEATHER BAGS LYNTONE WALLETS LORUS WATCHES BULOVA WATCHES RAY BAN SUNGLASSES FOSSIL WATCHES 832-0076 The Etc. Shop WATKINS CLOTHING & WOMEN+COSTUMES FORVEN & WOMEN+COSTUMES 922 MASSACHUSETTS LAWYER LAYETTE 031-843-0611 913-843-0611 HEALTH FAIR '91 LAST DAY TODAY! 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Watkins West Entrance FREE! VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS-841-5191 CHOLESTEROL CHECKS/HEALTHY SNACKS BROCHURES/DOOR PRIZES/& MUCH MORE! Health Center 864-9500 Health Education 864-9570 We Care for KU Students FRIDAY & SATURDAY—MIDNIGHT a different set of jaws. R JustinKnupp/KANSAN To prepare the Chi-Omea fountain for cooler weather and winter, Loren Brouhard, KU Facilities and Operations employee, washes the leaves and dirt out of the traditional KUlandmark. Brouhard said yesterday that if the weather warmed up, the fountain might be turned on but that otherwise it would remain off until April or May. Chi-O cleaning Journalism school now has a placement center By Mauricio Rios Kansan staff writer Students using the job placement centers of both the School of Journalism and the School of Business will not have to pay for each service. Until this year, the School of Journalism funded placement of students in internships or permanent jobs, said Mr. Goodman, associate dean of journalism To save money, the school formed the placement office, charging students $35 each for its use. In previous years, the placement center at the School of Business, which also charges $35, has served journalism students majoring in broadcast production, business communications and advertising. *We have been cooperating for Frederick Madau, director of the School of Business placement center, said some companies were looking for people in both schools. years," he said. "As far as services are concerned there is no difference. The main difference is that the journalism school is charging now." The purpose of the institution is to have students money. Madras said, So far this semester, the combined fee seems to be working fine, said Melissa Alberts, one of three staff members at the office in the School of Journalism "This year it has been tough for students," Alberts said, referring to the increasingly tight job market. More than 200 students already have signed up for placement at the journal's website. Alberts said the placement office's services included tips about interviewing skills and about writing cover letters and resumes. The journalism placement center is in 102 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The business placement center is in 125 Summerfield Hall. Bill targets exporters who use fish-killing drift nets The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Seafood exporters that have traditionally used drift nets will have to certify that products shipped to the United States were not caught with the so-called "curtains of death" effective next summer. The Bush administration on Wednesday adopted regulations effective July 1, 1992, banning U.S. imports of fish or fish products that were caught with the nets, which trap and kill anything in their path. Until then, fish caught with drift nets outside the south Pacific Ocean still will be allowed to be imported into the United States. But after the deadline, fish harvested with drift nets anywhere on the international high seas will not be allowed for sale in the United States, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said in a statement. Drift-netting nations that export seafood to the United States will be required to provide documents certified by a third party not taken with drift nets, NOAA said. Under the new regulations, France will be considered a drift netting nation along with Japan, Taiwan, North and South Korea. The rules define drift nets as any floating gill net with a length exceeding 2.5 kmiles, about 1.5 miles. Some drift nets stretch as long as 30 miles. The National Marine Fisheries Service reported that in 1990, just 10 percent of Japan's drift-net fleet killed 1,758 whales and dolphins, 253,288 tuna, 81,956 blue fish, 30,464 sea birds and more than 3 million non-target species, including some ground-triggered incidents in the Rivera basin rivers. Taiwan, reacting to U.S. trade-sanctions threats, said last month that it would end the use of drift nets in international waters effective July 1, 1982. Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore, has introduced legislation that would eventually require trade sanctions on countries that continue to use drift nuts. A United Nations resolution calling for an end to drift nets worldwide takes effect June 30, 1992, but critics say that the United States will allow their continued use. Legislation that President Bush signed into law last year required NOA, a part of the Commerce department, to adopt the new regulations. Pentagon OKs dig to search for missing NBC, CBS crews The Associated Press BOSTON — The Pentagon has agreed to dig up a site in Cambodia where five journalists from NBC News and CBS News are believed to have been executed and buried 21 years ago while covering the Vietnam War, an NBC producer said. If Cambodia villagers who directed an NBC News crew to the area last month are accurate, it would solve the mysterious disappearance of the group that included Welles Hangen, NBC foreign correspondent. The area where the journalists disappeared is 40 miles south of the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh. It is under water now because of Cambodia's monsoon season, and digging into the underground will be December, when the dry season arrives. Pete Williams, Pentagon representative telephoneled Timothy Rusert, NBC Washington bureau chief on Wednesday and agreed to the excavation, said Arthur Lord, NBC senior producer. Lord, who covered the Vietnam War and has pursued the fate of the missing journalists, said NBC. CBS and PEN would meet later to work out details. "We have all the maps," Lord said from his Burbank, Calif. office, "We'll release all the information we have to the Pentagon." Michael Gartner, president of NBC Lords said the networks were pleased with the Pentagon's response. "These guys are the real experts," Lord said. "They've been digging up parts of Indochina for military purposes but they don't not have their look for civilian MIAs?" News, sent a letter to Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney last month asking that a team from the Joint Casualty and Resolution Center in Honiolu go to Cambodia and organize an excavation. In all, 19 foreign journalists are missing from the wars in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. Hangen, Roger Coline, NBC camera operator from France and sound operator Yoshihiku Waku of Japan were among a group of journalists that disappeared May 30, 1970. George Syvertsen, CBS News correspondent, Jerry Miller, producer and Rarnik Lekhi, camera operator, Cameron the load beep was hit by a grenade. Communicist-led forces then surrounded the NBC crew and a CBS film team that included Japanese camera operators and sound operator Kojiro Sakai. All five journalists were ordered to walk into the jungle at gunpoint and were never seen again. The bodies of two soldiers, Kochi who were recovered three days later. PRELAW PROGRAM THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SCHOOL OF LAW Wednesday, September 25th. 7:00 p.m. Green Hall, Room 104 To help you plan a career in the legal profession, law school professors and students will be available to discuss with you your law school plans and answer questions about: - Prelaw Education * Admissions Process * Financial Aid Robert Jerry Martin Dickinson Reggie Robinson Frank West - Law School Curriculum * Joint Degree Programs * Law Placement Dean Professor of Law Professor of Law Law student REFRESHMENTS "Modifications of Clinical Interventions for Clients With HIV-Related Cognitive Impairments" Date: Friday, September 20, 1991 Time: 4:00 p.m. Place: 2094 Dole September 20,21,22 Tickets $2.50 available at the SUA Box Office 864-SHOW Director, Outpatient Psychology Service Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine New York University Medical Center ΨΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨXΨΨΨΨΨΨΨΨΨΨ DR.ROSELYNNSHERR Friday: 7:00 & 9:30pm Saturday: 7:00 & 9:30pm Sunday matinee: 2:00pm $3.00 1991 PSI CHI Colloquium Midnight Movies Friday & Saturday $3.00 Saturday Night Fever Sunday matinee: 2:00pm $^X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X \mathrm{XP} X$ $^X$ Make a Difference in a Child's Life Benefit for Lawrence Children Informational Meeting Sunday, Sept.22 2:00 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union Questions? Call 864-7316